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@TonyTheLion dat face is creepy
@R.MartinhoFernandes more like: Lost comet lander awakes
emphasize on lost
That's not how you spell "emphasis".
Wow, het Nederlandse Fairphone heeft een half modulaire smartphone gemaakt. Preview! http://tweakers.net/reviews/4067/fairphone-2-half-modulaire-smartphone-uit-nederland.html http://t.co/uEz4va0AVS
user1804599
> Fairphone heeft een duidelijke filosofie en dat is dat de telefoonindustrie eerlijker en duurzamer moet.
user1804599
09:10
is ie ook biologisch?
user1804599
inb4 govt-subsidised
Ven
Ven
yes nee nee
could not but noticing spacex has beefed up it's media presence as well
Ven
Ven
you mean "could not help but"?
omg too many dutch people here
I do love the idea of a modulated phone where I can replace parts as necessary.
09:17
@sbi -f only forces it. It pushes exactly the same things git push would try pushing.
However I hate the other philosophy.
@sbi Ah, that's a pity. I recommend changing the push.default option to simple. It's the default in 2.0, and it's a far better default. (git config --global push.default simple). Like this, unless you specify a branch, it pushes only to the upstream branch of the same name as the current local branch.
Ell
Ell
@Nooble yup :S
user1804599
I love the idea of a phone that can be used to make calls.
Ell
Ell
I think the fury will be good though
I don't think people were expecting that much from the 390X anyway - we knew they were likely a rebrand weeks (months?) ago
09:20
@rightfold You better buy one quick, I think in the near future it won't be easy anmore to make calls.
user1804599
I have one.
user1804599
It's Nokia so it'll last for another hundred years.
Didn't know msysgit was so far behind.
Latest stable release is 2.4.3.
@rightfold Well it outlasted nokia itself ;P
so modular
I hope that is auto-generated
09:24
@paul23 modular*
@rightfold meh. What would you use it for
so
wrote the thing
@rightfold so 80s
I knew pretty much everything
I expect around 20/60
which thing.
phones don't phone today
09:25
@sehe the security thing I failed last year?
it's coming back
today was the 2nd half-exam, which won't allow me to pass realistically because I'd need 50/60
then there will be the proper 1st-term exam for 60 points on which I need 25/60 and I'm actually aiming to pass
can someone prove that P=NP so I can reduce my problems?
plz
@AlexM. I did that when I was in high school.
@BartekBanachewicz oh
Why don't I get requests on codementor
@Mr.kbok lol dude
09:29
My profile sucks :(
You need to whore up.
no, there's just not enough people
@Mr.kbok because you don't have the fashion statement in the profile pic
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes "It pushes exactly what git push would push." != "It pushes exactly what git push would try pushing."
sbi
sbi
09:31
:)
@sbi :)
I really recommend changing the push.default thing, though.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah. So if I've done this, then what? Because I did this. (I had no idea what I was doing, but git recommended this setting.)
@sbi If git push -f pushed everything, then you hadn't done that.
@sehe fashion statement?
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes You know, I'm not the only one at work who's a git newbie, and someone else did exactly the same thing. So it might not have been me who fucked up, but him. (See the silver lining at the horizon?)
09:34
> Common sense tells us that MD5, being cryptographically sound, should always stay ahead on pure entropy measurement, but the avalanching properties of Murmur are gorgeous. So I'm happy with this. 100% Pinkie Pie approved.
@Mr.kbok I was trying to think of reasons why Bartek is getting requests
How do you debug HTTP digest auth failing URGH
sbi
sbi
[push]
default = simple
user1804599
digest more food
@sbi how about we focus on fixing things (have you managed to fix it? Have you inspected the reflog(s)?)
fucking fucketty fucks
09:36
@sehe Is this guy 14 lol
@buttifulbuttefly tcpdump/fiddler
sbi
sbi
@sehe Someone already did. It's fine now.
@Mr.kbok I don't think so. Much too erudite. I like it
@sbi :D that's the important bit
sbi
sbi
It's always a good feeling when you realize it wasn't you who fucked up, that it's someone else's fault. Even if you only failed to fuck up by accident. :)
09:37
@sehe I have all the info I need actually
someone quickly flag it & ban it
Oh. Really.
To me it's always nice to know what caused the fuckup. Related, but not the same motive
> Role: Junior Dev
> Nice to have skills: Commercial development experience
sigh
The browser and the server compute the hashes differently
ARGHHSGHRJSRG
sbi
sbi
@sehe Ach, you're boring!
09:38
Thank you
sbi
sbi
You're welcome.
^ boring :)
sbi
sbi
Anyway, my day isn't boring. One of the kids got ill this morning, and I now need to leave to go to the doctor's... Sigh.
See you!
unbearably boring
user1804599
I wish I could make software.
09:39
@sbi Oh. Hope it's not serious.
@rightfold += "with jQuery"
user1804599
no
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz why sigh?
user1804599
fuck jQuery
omg blasphemy
09:40
@Ell if you have commercial experience, why would you be a junior
Ell
Ell
if you're moving to a new company and don't have enough experience to be a non-junior?
@rightfold flag&ban
Ell
Ell
it only says "nice to have" tbf
is not a polar bear
user1804599
09:41
lol client
user1804599
> I forgot my SMTP password.
> Should I change the DNS settings?
change the underwear
you should be safe then
response	 "0b3a93cdd31aa88d2b5631fd200825e7"
expected	 "73927479c477752a9c37b97f30a8022b"
Close enough
fuck you md5
2
Q: How to convert password into md5 in jquery?

Khushang BhavnagarwalaActually i am creating changepassword page. and this is my function of checking old password is match with the existing password or not. And that password is stored in MD5 in database so i want to first convert that password in MD5 and after that i can check that password. Here is the code. fun...

notice the accepted answer
09:43
@Ell still
@MarcoA. You need additional plugins fo this!
Awesome
Excel should just adopt symbolic maths
Up to the very `displaying´
cool
It's rounded ?
09:48
Joel Spolsky worked on excel and IIRC he has a blog post explaining some of the decisions made in it - namely sacrifices in order to be very fast
Also, anyone knows about SxS here?
Ven
Ven
SxS?
@sehe what the fuck
user1804599
S^2
@Ven Windows Side by Side
09:48
@Mr.kbok yeah
it's this versioned DLL thing right?
@Mr.kbok component store?
Yeah
@BartekBanachewicz linked from the "Rightsizing" slides you shared y'day
> cryptographically sound
@Mr.kbok Dude, trigger warning please.
09:49
is this an article from 2002
:P
@BenjaminGruenbaum They ought to add more options so that a user can make choices for those sacrifices.
@milleniumbug why?
GIven I nowadays always use python for anything I previously used excel :P.
@paul23 from excel to python... well that's a huge step
next upgrade: from Powerpoint to C++
09:50
Ok except maybe making actual tables to display data (but then I deliver anything in latex so I even sometimes use python to export data formatted as latex nowadays)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sorry, it's a bad habit
So, I have this error "side-by-side configuration is incorrect. Please see the application event log or... etc"
@MarcoA. It's hard to notice sarcasm over th internet
user1804599
> We are able to close, and open OS X applications with GoLang, however, we are clueless about where to look at, in order to switch between opened app windows using Go.
user1804599
> we
But from depends.exe everything looks fine
09:51
@paul23 but I use it all the time! You should know by now : (
it's on by default!
@sehe Hadn't MD5 been broken since some time ago?
Obviously I can't shell into the machine that throws the error
@MarcoA. Dun like it, where's the options menu to change it?
@milleniumbug It's not used in a crypto context here
09:51
@sehe OIC.
I'd never expect
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have to admit that is really cool
@Mr.kbok "cryptographically sound" implies something different
It implies a musical context
@milleniumbug It doesn't.
You want a good entropy, so MD5 is an excellent candidate because it's used in cryptography. However, this isn't cryptography, so entropy is not the only attribute that's important here: performance is important too. So you may sacrifice entropy for a better performance.
@milleniumbug Oh like that. I don't think that's what they meant with cryptographically sound. I think that means "satisfies the statistical tests required for cryptographical purposes". Which it does. That doesn't make it impossible to attack, it makes it cryptographically sound (e.g. non-linearity of hashes of related inputs)
@Mr.kbok ^
09:56
Ok, I get it
It doesn't matter if MD5 has been broken, it's used as a table hash, not a crypto hash
I like how you say it with far fewer words
typedef is screwing things up. I'd be more inclined into thinking that gcc is right though: stackoverflow.com/q/30861592/1938163
it might be worth a question on SO perhaps
@MarcoA. seems like an extension
@sehe they usually write it out if it is an extension
09:58
I like the accurate message though warning: ‘typedef’ was ignored in this declaration
Not very useful, but quite expressive
> The declaration in a template-declaration shall — (1.1) declare or define a function, a class, or a variable, or — (1.2) define a member function, a member class, a member enumeration, or a static data member of a class template or of a class nested within a class template, or — (1.3) define a member template of a class or class template, or — (1.4) be an alias-declaration.
typedef is not covered into any of these, so it shouldn't be allowed I suppose
It's new syntax for me
user1804599
bukkhaki
Ell
Ell
I don't know of any checksum algorithms that don't aim to be crypto-safe or w/e
8 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
Don't use ~~~cloud~~~ password managers
lol sercurity advize
10:05
@Ell many don't. CRC32 :)
8 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
ahahahahaahhaha lastpass master passwords got compromised
user1804599
Store your passwords on GitHub.
@R.MartinhoFernandes they didn't.
Yes they did. Losing the hashes is compromise
It's not trivial to crack (kudos) but it's possible. So, need to change master passwords
That's what "compromised" means.
10:06
> The investigation has shown, however, that LastPass account email addresses, password reminders, server per user salts, and authentication hashes were compromised.
Horse's mouth.
there's a difference for me between compromising a password and compromising a hash
You can be blackmailed with compromising pictures. Your privacy has been compromised, even though your home wasn't necessarily burgled or something
Speaking of horses, please remove your blinders.
2
especially because the password is used as a local decryption key
@BartekBanachewicz There's a difference for everyone. But the safety of master password was compromised.
10:07
rotfl password reminders
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah, right, just because I said the passwords weren't compromised when the hashes were, I'm "wearing blinders"
Yes
I'll just procede to call you all fucking paranoid maniacs then
4
it's as sensible as that.
user1804599
are you compromising
Don't downplay what happened because it could be far worse (in fact, it's usually far worse)
Starred as a compliment.
Maniacs for truth over emotion
10:09
the hashes leaking are a shitty thing of course. But then again, the data of users, being their passwords, is still perfectly secure.
@sehe "I used a different wording than you so obviously I have teh truth"
> perfectly
@BartekBanachewicz That's blatantly false.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz it says it on their own website that stuff was compromised, why would they say it had been if it hadn't?
why the fuck I uh
10:11
@Ell Marketing!
6 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
8 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
ahahahahaahhaha lastpass master passwords got compromised
wait
4 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
there's a difference for me between compromising a password and compromising a hash
4 mins ago, by sehe
@BartekBanachewicz There's a difference for everyone. But the safety of master password was compromised.
WOW IT FUCKING WORKED
Just read it again for fuck's sake before you respond to me misinterpreting what I said again
fucking shit god.
Ell
Ell
10:11
> The investigation has shown, however, that LastPass account email addresses, password reminders, server per user salts, and authentication hashes were compromised.
YES ROBOT CITED THAT 3 MINUTES AGO ELLIOTT THANK YOU
@BartekBanachewicz No. You tried to remove the word "compromised" for non-factual reasons
Ell
Ell
^this means the safety of the master password is compromised, right?
Turns out the password scheme is actually more complicated than that
@sehe As it turns out, "compromising a password safety" and "compromising a password" also mean different things to me.
10:13
@BartekBanachewicz Because the data is only as secure as the passwords.
What would be a good name for a source-target pair property? is there a word for it?
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's only time until the hash is broken. With shitty passwords/prior knowledge, it could be soon. On a principled level, the hash was the secret
@BartekBanachewicz It only means something different if you like to make meaningless distinctions.
> You tried to remove the word "compromised" for non-factual reasons
@ReutSharabani SourceTargetPairProperty. Alternatively, George Stockings.
10:14
@ReutSharabani edge, arc, connection
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol right except that "meaningless distinction" is age of universe in computing power
wait what is going on here
@sehe thanks, that's ok I guess
@BartekBanachewicz Except it's not.
10:15
why did that get starred
Does some one have the time to help (and a hello to @BartekBanachewicz who has helped me many many times:) )? I want to do the following

__int64 myNumber = 16;
char* converted = (char*)myNumber; //kaboom

I'm using c++ and Visual Studio but the variable converted always shows "undefined value"
> and a hello to @BartekBanachewicz who has helped me many many times
you traitor
eh?
I'm sure you have too
sorry, I think me and Barket got chatting about Ibanez guitars once
I am allowed to betray myself and the rest of this room
so I remember him more
10:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes so what's the difference between having a hash and having a password then.
Ven
Ven
@buttifulbuttefly, we still resent you for it
That's the goal
although any one can help if they want and I'll remember you from then on ha ha
@MyDaftQuestions You know what that code does?
@BartekBanachewicz A cursory search indicates it is only a few minutes for a 10-character password.
I'm surprised you didn't even do a cursory search before making your claim.
WAIT I'm not surprised.
10:18
2^>200 will likely never be feasible barring changes to known physical laws. — ike Nov 12 '14 at 5:33
I did.
Yeah sure and man will never fly!
@BartekBanachewicz You didn't. They don't use SHA-256.
@BartekBanachewicz Seriously, shut the fuck up.
That's friendly advice.
> LastPass strengthens the authentication hash with a random salt and 100,000 rounds of server-side PBKDF2-SHA256
That's mean.
@BartekBanachewicz That's not SHA-256.
10:19
8 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
They say they used 100000 rounds of PBKDF2-SHA256 but that's not really that much
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's rude tbh
> With regular cryptographic hash functions (e.g. MD5, SHA256), an attacker can guess billions of passwords per second. With PBKDF2, bcrypt, or scrypt, the attacker can only make a few thousand guesses per second (or less, depending on the configuration).
@BartekBanachewicz That doesn't state anything about the computing power available.
keep moving the goalposts
Attackers can easily have hundreds of thousands of GPUs around.
@BartekBanachewicz I'm merely rejecting your evidence.
lol, I love it when people talk crypto.
10:22
and how much time will a hundred thousand GPUs take to crack one such hash
@BartekBanachewicz You do the math.
@BenjaminGruenbaum me too, except I understand nothing of what they're saying
Someone mentioned GPUs!
@buttifulbuttefly. I needed to do
(char*)&myNumber;
(with the ampersand). D'OH! Thank you
@AndyProwl I'm supposed to understand what they're saying, I took a course that was supposed to explain it and I vaguely remember what pbkdf2 means and how SHA works :D
10:24
I've read "pbkdf2" for the first time and had to pay special attention to type it correctly. I know SHA is a thing but I have no idea how it works nor that it had "rounds"
it's like when I read about physics, or slightly advanced maths
@BartekBanachewicz Also gee, your cherry-picking is impressive blinders are of high-quality.
You underestimate the power of this fully armed and operational GPU cracking setup. If we take [oclHashcat] on one PC with 8x AMD R9 290X at stock core clock, it's 162 billion MD5/second, 11 billion SHA-256/second, 797 million SHA-512/second, and 1.3 million WPA or WPA2/second (WPA/WPA2 is roughly equivalent to PBKDF2-HMAC-SHA-1(pass, salt, 8192 iterations, 20 output bytes) — Anti-weakpasswords Apr 10 '14 at 3:45
@AndyProwl well, for pbkdf for practical matters "rounds" just means that you can keep on making it stronger. You can apply more rounds as you go.
Comment right below the thing you quoted.
> you are rendering the results you might want to make use of Computer Shaders
> Computer Shaders
/cc @Bartek
@R.MartinhoFernandes Here it is then, hopefully correct. 20-character password of alphanumerics gives you approx 60^20 combinations. If one GPU can crack 11 billion of SHA-256/s, then obviously with a hundred thousands of them can crack 11 * 10^9 * 10^5/s, which is about only 840 times the age of universe. And that's without PBKDF2.
I saw that comment, obviously.
10:28
I love computer shaders
@BartekBanachewicz You also obviously chose to ignore it.
I relate to it above.
@MarcoA. Can I ask you something
Despite having a ton of very specific data, in contrast to the other thing you quoted.
How many people do you know with 20 character passwords?
10:29
hunter20characterpassword
Not many. Most use ~10.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I based on that data.
@R.MartinhoFernandes We're talking about the LastPass master passwords, which should be well over 20. /cc @Griwes
cough
Oh, and yeah, you're still ignoring rainbow tables.
@buttifulbuttefly sure
And even the salts were leaked.
10:30
oh well, assuming a ten-character password it's 10 minutes on a hundred thousand GPUs
but my calculations still don't take PBKDF2 into account
@MarcoA. Is Robert Crovella paid to answer CUDA questions all day or what
and if the answer is correct, it should take it back into unreasonable levels even for passwords 10-20 chars in size
@R.MartinhoFernandes are we talking SHA or PBKDF? Rainbow tables wouldn't work anyway if applied correctly and no one should use SHA for crypto anyway.
12 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
> LastPass strengthens the authentication hash with a random salt and 100,000 rounds of server-side PBKDF2-SHA256
Although really, the only resource you should trust here is OWASP owasp.org/index.php/Password_Storage_Cheat_Sheet
10:31
@buttifulbuttefly I wondered the same to be honest..
all in all, I'm still going to change my password
it might be since he's always up-to-date with the latest hardware improvements (I am not, and that means I often give out crappy answers)
but I seriously doubt there was any practical danger, even if we assume someone wanting my password had 100k GPUs
@BartekBanachewicz Yes, that's where the blinders come in. You will notice that the LastPass team disagrees with you.
@MarcoA. There's quite a number of NVIDIA employees in the top users on the tag, I call cheating!
10:34
the GPUs mentioned cost about $500 apiece so, that's just shy of 50 million dollars
@BartekBanachewicz
@BartekBanachewicz You don't have to buy them.
I didn't know all of my online accounts were worth 50 million dollars
pff I wish there was a copyright license that puts rights at the end users. Instead of putting it at the copyright holders. Like in articles end users are the ones who may claim plagiarism (and actually not only the ones who are plagiarised themselves, they have no special extra power).
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah, right, we have AWS now.
@BartekBanachewicz -> botnets
10:34
But in copyright it seems always action has to come from the copyright holder.
@BartekBanachewicz sigh.
@R.MartinhoFernandes changing a password is trivial
A botnet is a number of Internet-connected computers communicating with other similar machines in an effort to complete repetitive tasks and objectives. This can be as mundane as keeping control of an Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel, or it could be used to send spam email or participate in distributed denial-of-service attacks. The word botnet is a combination of the words robot and network. The term is usually used with a negative or malicious connotation. == Types of botnets == === Legal botnets === The term botnet is widely used when several IRC bots have been linked and may possib...
I don't see why I shouldn't change my password
I do that periodically, too, despite there's no imminent danger
there's no imminent danger in my opinion here either, but it's so easy to take precautions it's braindead
risk assessment 101 huh.
@BartekBanachewicz That's not the reasoning behind periodical changes.
10:36
You say that what I said that isn't a reason isn't the reason.
Periodical changes essentially limit the time you have to perform an attack.
It's not because of "imminent danger".
It's actually because of latent danger.
well, and it's similar with hash leak, no?
I'll read that as "oh, right".
10:37
I'm used to people misreading what I write alright.
Ell
Ell
I might invest in some eneloop batteries
Ceres is boring.
What's that reflection
Does any one know what causes the white markings (the reflcting bits)
I heard ice - I think I heard ice
but seems odd it's so localised.
lol googling for "ceres sparkling" did not help
10:50
0lol
@milleniumbug It's the lights of a city at night
@AndyProwl s/sparkling/bright spots/
neither does Googling "white spots" - in fact, the images was pretty grim
Probably volcanic activity.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, eventually I managed
10:51
@buttifulbuttefly nope, just flying cicadas
Ars' password expert says he's not changing his password due to LastPass breach, only 10 attempts/sec with a Titan X. http://arstechnica.com/security/2015/06/hack-of-cloud-based-lastpass-exposes-encrypted-master-passwords/
but also
5/ However, if you use a password that's common, short, or in the dictionary, suddenly thousands of attempts a second are pretty scary!
Ha, we had those last year @milleniumbug, suddenly over a few hours, hundreds errupoted from the garden. never heard of them, and with the beer we had, we felt it was a plague coming to destroy the world... or at least, us. We hid under a gass BBQ I think
@R.MartinhoFernandes I went for "ice"
@BartekBanachewicz It's the same. The hash is the secret.
10:54
Let's play Jeopardy!

Q: Runs blazingly fast, prevents nearly all segfaults, and guarantees thread safety.
Meanwhile, 8 AU away, Tethys' Eyes!
@VictorLopez Hi?
@BartekBanachewicz hehe. I'm not.
@VictorLopez A: What does the stream of water do to the computer?
@R.MartinhoFernandes beautiful
@sehe Cassini ❤️‍
Xeo
Xeo
10:57
When were you going to propose to Cassini?
@milleniumbug Wrong, the answer was: What is the Rust programming language?
Right.
@VictorLopez That doesn't match the answer.
Rust is what a stream of water does to a computer, among other things.
For example, there's no usage of the verb "to be" in the answer.
10:59
@Xeo Saturn for next Unconference venue
4
@VictorLopez But water meets all the requirements: runs fast, and if your computer is destroyed, it won't segfault and the thread safety is not an issue.
Count me out

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