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06:00
@Lalaland With the FBI wanting them to insert backdoors?
that's a very sophisticated pun
user406009
@ElimGarak Yeah. And Apple refusing to do it.
@HubertApplebaum yes, while at the same time still catering to a certain base homophobia
user406009
Indeed, but it is only a strong request or a demand. If they actually modified the laws to support it, Apple would have no choice but to comply.
user406009
06:03
The government claims that there is a law which applies to this matter.
user406009
Other people disagree or think the law is dumb.
user406009
If the courts decide that the law applies, then Apple will be forced to comply.
If the government has a law and Apple's time to comply expires, popele in blue windbreakers will visit them.
Yeah, that.
user406009
@ElimGarak The FBI has already visited Apple campus.
Ah, that was mostly friendly.
user406009
> Sources on the scene are reporting multiple black Lincoln town cars and Escalades with Maryland license plates spotted at Apple Executive Briefing Center.
IMO, never fuck with teh government. It doesn't end well. Try to talk them down, get the public on your side, but don't fight htem.
k I’m going to go with the rule of thumb of 'do not provide convenience variable templates for partial metafunctions' cus it’s hard to get right
user406009
Well, I guess it depends on how you define "fight".
and now I want to query where to find those convenience variable templates in my code cus I know I already have some :(
06:06
Refuse to comply with laws which are in place because you disagree with them
is one way of trying to fight them
user406009
Civil disobedience has a good track record for enacting change. At least in the US.
But the ones who disobey don't really reap much of the rewards
user406009
So, "fighting" by refusing to comply does sometimes work.
and Apple likes its moneys too much
user406009
It all depends on whether the public will side with Apple or not.
user406009
06:08
I personally think not.
user406009
I mean, as far as most people are concerned, the FBI have a valid legal warrant from a judge and that's a done deal.
How the world has changed, silent surveillance and oversight has been brought into the light and people got what they wanted, government transparency in that regard. And now the government parks its black cars in front of your house and asks for that information with no subterfuge.
Governments gonna govern.
user406009
Well, the legal system always had stuff like that. If a police officer gets a warrant for your house, they can bust in there and look through all your porno magazines.
user406009
And we've had that system pretty much for evver.
@ElimGarak The matter is more complicated than that
This case has little to no precedence
user406009
06:12
And if you own a storage unit, the government has always been able to get the key from the storage company.
It's the equivalent of asking for a master key that opens all doors in the U.S.A. including safes and whatnot.
user406009
@Shoe Nah, they specifically only want this key to work on this specific phone.
user406009
The FBI is requested it to be tied to this phone's specific ID.
> Some would argue that building a backdoor for just one iPhone is a simple, clean-cut solution. But it ignores both the basics of digital security and the significance of what the government is demanding in this case.
> The government suggests this tool could only be used once, on one phone. But that’s simply not true. Once created, the technique could be used over and over again, on any number of devices. In the physical world, it would be the equivalent of a master key, capable of opening hundreds of millions of locks — from restaurants and banks to stores and homes. No reasonable person would find that acceptable.
If the government wants it, the government gets it.
06:14
Again, it's not that simple
user406009
@ElimGarak Well, theoretically, judges are supposed to protect us from the government.
theoretically
It's like I'm talking to a 5 years old
BUT THE GOVERNMENT HAS TANKS AND NUKES
IT CAN DO WHAT IT WANTS
user406009
@Shoe In this specific case, they will get something that will only work on this specific phone.
No, not really, shoe.
user406009
06:15
You are right, that there are scary precedents that this will set.
user406009
But the actual thing the FBI wants is not scary.
The government doesn't need tanks and nukes to deal with dorks.
It doesn't even need guns.
@Lalaland What if the phone is connected to the Apple cloud, and that request would mean make the cloud also insecure due to that phone?
There are so many other things to consider
user406009
@Shoe Uh, have you looked at the FBI's list of demands?
Dammit, shoe, have you read anything
user406009
06:18
The FBI wants a software update to enable unlimited password guesses and an automated way of performing password guesses. They specifically want this software update to only work on this specific phone.
@Lalaland I've read the letter, a couple of blog posts about it, the announcement from both Tim Cook and Google's CEO and that's it.
No other source linked to any "FBI list of demands", I actually think the details of said demands are not public.
But I'll gladly read them if you link them to me.
user406009
The reason why people will not be able to "trivially" allow it to work on multiple phones is because Apple signs every software update.
user406009
@Shoe Getting the link right now.
@Lalaland So say the phone used here uploads something to Apple's cloud. How would the FBI be able to access it without compromising the safety of the cloud for everyone?
They are not trying to ban encryption or weaken it, they just want to ease up on the password timeouts (iteratively higher wait times until it is effectively bricked)
Password timeouts as in the usually 4 digit code on the phone etc. For everything else, they've got warrants
06:21
Also what prevents the user of said phone to encrypt his messages using his computer, copy and paste the content of the encrypted message into his phone and send an email like that?
user406009
There's the FBI's list of demands.
Keywords: seized device
Basically, what FBI wants is the equivalent of a game console devkit. Have all those studios around the world compromised the security of the Xbox One / Playstation 4?
user406009
@ElimGarak People are afraid because they think this will set a bad precedent.
user406009
That will help with banning encryption in the future.
user406009
06:25
Sorta like a slippery slope sort of thing.
user406009
First they start asking for us to disable our timeouts. Then they start asking us for backdoors, etc, etc.
I agree, but still... I don't know what people can do about it if the law is already in place. Place for action is usually when they're trying to pass a law, like all those stupid proposals regarding the neutrality of the internet
@Lalaland Can you reply to my other two messages?
user406009
Oops, sorry, didn't notice them.
user406009
@Shoe Theoretically, the password for this person's Apple cloud data is on the device itself.
user406009
06:29
Once they crack the device, they can get the password.
user406009
If not, they can try filing another warrant.
It's more the matter of him potentially being already logged in
@Lalaland That would make no sense
user406009
@Shoe Nothing. That is beyond the scope of this demand.
Why would a server cloud store the password of the user on the client side?
06:30
no, not storing the password, a session
they open up my phone just like I do and I'm already logged in wrt to the cloud and other services
otherwise, they need warrants (which Apple said is happy to oblige)
Wait wait wait. If the FBI gets it, I also want it >:-(
user406009
@ElimGarak Interpretation is really important in law.
@Lalaland How would that help?
The only piece of security violated is the phone passcode system and it requires a special devkit provided by Apple for FBI to violate it. There is the matter of it leaking on the internet, but that can be rectified really quickly even if it happens.
The fundamental problem in that case is that the service you are trying to "hack" is shared between a lot of different people.
user406009
06:33
@ElimGarak Leaking won't matter. It will only apply to one device and only Apple can sign modified binaries.
@Lalaland yup
So weakening the security for one means weakening it for all.
@Lalaland What
I suck what is signing.
You sign a file so that the device using it can verify it's from apple and apple only.
Not from some other source.
Code signing, basically verifying that the code can execute on the device.
06:35
Oh, that seems fine then.
The risk is what Lala mentions, future requests
what they want now dances on the benign side, there is no security risk
Does Apple have to honor these requests?
there is a law in place, but it hasn't been enforced in such a manner
courts will decide
user406009
@Nooble That's currently debatable. It'll be fought out in the courts.
06:37
inb4 FBI trying to deputize Apple
user406009
@Shoe Yeah, there is that out clause as well.
user406009
But I think Apple is technically capable of honoring the request.
I actually think it's not.
user406009
People are bickering constantly right now on Twitter et all if Apple can actually do it.
It would be a matter of minutes for Apple, once they have the software in place
06:38
As I said, IMHO things are so interconnected that they are not able to weaken the security for one person only without endangering other clients too.
The cloud thing is just an example.
The example I'm perhaps more familiar with.
FBI is literally only asking what your girlfriend asks
@Shoe They just have access to the session.
give me the passcode so I can see dem pics and messages, boo
@ElimGarak Ugh.
@Nooble What session?
06:39
cloud, facebook, twitter sessions are just what comes unraveled in that specific case
nobody else is compromised because your gf got your passcode
except you
@Shoe You know, when you turn on your phone and it auto logs on to stuff.
I'm pretty sure they don't just have a session token on their side and check it with the requester token.
All I'm saying is perhaps things are more complicated than they look.
They're not
user406009
@ElimGarak nah, its tricky to flash a software update to a locked iPhone.
@Lalaland Tricky for you and me, not for those who made it
tedious maybe, don't want to do it definitely, but not tricky
06:42
Why would Apple stir shit up if it was possible to simply crack this one phone just like many others they have done in the past? If it's for a marketing ploy, why is Google siding with them making their message even stronger? If it's to protect precedences, then there are many other precedences in which they were asked to crack a single device or single account and give out informations, so it doesn't seem dangerous at all.
@ElimGarak There could be more to it than just that--if Apple gives them the software to do so, they could proceed to reverse engineer the software, and gain the ability to break into other phones without asking for help.
^ this too
@Lalaland I'm not sure I understand. Will this be a software update for iOS rolled out to everyone, or is it just flashed when needed?
user406009
@JerryCoffin they would need Apple's software signing key.
People could just, like, not update.
06:43
Things are complicated.
@JerryCoffin We all know the US government would never do something like that! They'll be good little boyscouts and delete it immediately.
user406009
And they are fine if Apple just gives them the password directly. They just want the phone for pretty good reasons.
Apple probably doesn't know the password.
The basic of security suggests you use something like BCrypt or whatever other strong one way hashing function that doesn't allow the password to be found back.
If they're going to do underhanded shit like that, why ask for anything?
user406009
@Nooble Apple will somehow magically flash this one device. It'll be a little tricky since the normal update techniques won't work as the phone is locked.
06:46
@ElimGarak That's kind of understating the situation. There is a law that's intended to support wire taps, that requires carriers and such to provide technical assistance in carrying out a wire tap. It's vague enough (has a clause about "or other persons") that you can sort of see where it doesn't explicitly exclude the interpretation the FBI is trying to use, but at the same time it seems pretty clear that they're stretching the meaning far beyond what was originally intended.
@Lalaland Did they not put security measures in place so that people wouldn't be able to do this?
user406009
@Shoe the FBI is assuming there is a weak password. They probably have their dictionary ready.
And if they made it so people wouldn't be able to get in, how could they?
user406009
@Nooble only for the 5S and later. The 5C is too old.
@Lalaland I doubt Apple, or any other famous company really... except Yahoo, has weak passwords as of 2016
06:47
@Lalaland Wow.
user406009
@Shoe they are hoping the terrorist had a weak password.
@Shoe The assumption here isn't that Apple's code signing password is weak, but that the password used by the end-user who owned the phone is probably weak (at least I'm pretty sure that's the assumption involved).
Oh I see
That's possible
Yes, Jerry, that's right. Usually it is rather trivial.
Considering I've read few months ago an article that explained how backdoors would not help because the majority of terrorists don't even bother with encryption.
user406009
06:49
@JerryCoffin there are also parallel construction conspiracy theories circling around.
You guys remember that one?
Now, why can't the FBI figure out how to flash software onto that device?
user406009
But there are a always conspiracy theories.
@Shoe Not sure if it was the same one, but I've read a couple such articles (and heard about more, but didn't bother to read all of them).
Although, this whole public outcry is going to give everyone with half a brain a reason to switch the passcode entry to alphanumeric and drop in a long sausage of a code.
06:50
Actually, is the OS kept in storage separate from actual internal storage?
user406009
@Nooble the new software must be signed with Apple's key. And it's a bit tricky to flash a locked device.
user406009
@ElimGarak like users actually care about security
@Nooble I believe it's all together any more.
@JerryCoffin So if you flash storage like that, won't it get rid of the data you want?
user406009
Truthfully, the only reason why I use a PIN is to cut down on butt dialling.
06:52
@Lalaland Flashing a locked device is fairly easy, as long as you have plenty of money to spend (you basically remove the flash device, flash it, then reinstall). Does get trickier if (as is often the case in newer phones) the flash chip is inside a multi-chip module along with other chips though.
@Nooble Almost certainly uses sectored flash, which means you can erase some parts while leaving others intact.
@JerryCoffin Is this division variable?
user406009
@JerryCoffin flashing is easy. Flashing without losing the all important encryption key takes more finesse.
inb4 FBI flashes the badge and the phone unlocks
@Lalaland My own guess is that the FBI is...at least telling a bit of a fib, shall we say, when they claim they need Apple's help in this at all. Although it is somewhat less certain, my guess is that they could remove the flash, dump the contents, and attack it as raw data (with nothing active to do erasing, etc.) But, that's hard work, and they'd rather set a precedent of companies having to help them on demand.
It probably would be variable because the OS varies in size per update, and there wouldn't be any use in wasting storage by over-provisioning. But why would they sector it unless they wanted to be able to flash the device?
06:59
@Nooble It's typically in blocks of something like 2K or 4K (maybe larger on a big device) so it ends up acting pretty much like sectors on a disk drive.
@Nooble They pretty much have to sector it. The alternative would be that any change you make (e.g., storing a phone number or picture) copies the entire flash to RAM, makes the change, then rewrites the entire Flash. Oh, and if the battery dies during the writing, you just bricked it.
@JerryCoffin Ah alright.
Probably a news article by apple
To boast their security features
My iPhone account was hacked before & I am nobody
@Telkitty Then why is Google siding with them?
You assume that everyone knows the truth ...
Alright, bets on how this turns out, will the courts compel Apple?
I bet robot's return on nay.
07:05
I assume that one of their major competitor would do some research about it
@ElimGarak They don't comply until it's illegal not to. Something about security and how the value it and love their customers.
What was nsa doing all these times??
@Shoe Tsk tsk, appealing to authority. Apple and Google are just as liable to have knee jerk reactions as anybody else :P
@ElimGarak Apple has been almost amazingly successful in court...
No record of any phone calls? No internet record for the number?? Nothing??
07:06
They have the moneys which pay for the lawyers
IRTA monkeys, for a moment, I had a funny picture in my mind
@Shoe There's more to it than that. Microsoft (for one obvious example) hasn't been nearly as successful, even though they also have enough money to hire good attorneys.
They have the moneys which pay for the judges then?
In a hierarchy point of view, country > corporation
Unless you can dope the voters to believe it's for their own good
07:09
@Shoe Not to make any accusations, but in a few cases I've almost wondered...
- It's incomplete.
- But is it accurate?
- I just said it is incomplete.
- But in the dictionary...
Hi guiz
sup cmdline
Well it's either black or white, and today, kinda black
07:25
how's Paris today?
Nothing special going on
WTB natural fucking unpacking.
what does that even mean
So, I have a flashlight which looks like a bomb trigger
@ElimGarak mostly black because migrants
07:33
Oh, wait, it's snowing
It has a red button on top which lights up when active
Certainly not a 21st century design
@Rerito yer shitting me
silly continental weather, invest in a better Gulfstream-fed ocean
07:49
ET DES CANELÉS
@HubertApplebaum haha ouais
à peu près tout ce que je connais sur le pays, le vin (duh) et les canelés
parigos de merde
et oui n'ayons pas peur de le dire !
oech tg babtou fragile
est-ce un combat ? une lutte, est-ce ?
ah et aussi je soupçonne qu’à chaque fois que je demande des pains au chocolat chez le boulanger ils me regardent de travers, mais ptet que je suis parano :/
07:52
@LucDanton T'es au pays de la chocolatine aussi
naaaaaaaaaaah j’ai raison et eux pas
mon jdm tombe à l'eau
honte&décadence
@HubertApplebaum ué j’ai rien pigé ça tourne autour des syndicats ou bien
jdm=joek de merde ?
07:54
> Lutèce est une forme francisée du nom employé par les Romains Lutetia ou Lutetia Parisiorum pour désigner la ville gauloise connue aujourd'hui sous le nom de Paris
cancres
> > Aveyron: une conseillère agricole tuée lors d'une visite à un éleveur
> Les fameuses no-go zones.
inapprops but oh well
Though living here has taught me to hate people who don't walk and don't keep their right on escalators
never come to HK
@Rerito oh man I keep feeling bad about walking so fast
user1804599
@fredoverflow meh.
07:56
when everybody else is chill and taking the time to appreciate life
user1804599
@Sino No, I'm sane, i.e. religionless.
@LucDanton Ikr, can't help walking fast else I'm getting bored
user1804599
Skype For Mac Team Has Agreed To Remove The Word 'Unexpected' From Crash Reports
to_string vs operator<<
this bikeshed provided to you by Keshed
@Zoidberg wut
07:57
@HubertApplebaum I don’t like to_string, but then again it’s not like I love operator<<
Which must look kinda funny since I'm a manlet
of a rabic origin
> Our code is so bad that crashes aren't "unexpected".
user1804599
Developer Accused Of Unreadable Code Refuses To Comment
AHAHAHAHAHA. You got me. Now I see the "onion" part.
08:00
tell me, stycial, if it weren't for the "onion" part, you'd have taken it seriously?
@HubertApplebaum No. That second one was ridiculous enough that it made me look at the sn.
carefully takes note
So @HubertApplebaum back in the mother land soon?
@Rerito it’s a fatherland you commie
@Rerito You mean mainland China?
08:03
@HubertApplebaum France
yeah when you guys stop pushing over agricultural counselors into ponds thanks
Well if I can get a non-sucky GPU job I'd consider it :)
j’ai pas lu le machin parce que ça sentait le fait divers glauque et jdois dire que ça me rassure pas lol
et ben écoute je l'ai pas lu non plus tout ce que je peux te dire c'est qu'il l'a poussée dans un étang et qu'elle est morte d'un arrêt cardio-respiratoire voilà à 25 ans bien joué tout ça pour une histoire bête c'est vraiment vache ça vaut vraiment pas de quoi en faire tout un foin ok j'arrête
user1804599
@fredoverflow What do you call a Scala programmer who hasn't taken a shower for a while?
Odorsky
@HubertApplebaum tragically I can never link to Archer clips because of ContentID, but: inapprops
08:09
@HubertApplebaum Quel fumier
Archer has contentid?
@HubertApplebaum I assume, since the show is vastly popular and extremely quotable yet I never find anything
user1804599
yay Go 1.6
impossible, I was watching it just the other day on YT
@HubertApplebaum okay so maybe the show is very popular but towards that part of the population that’s too lazy to upload quotes so that I can onebox them into this chat
08:13
How do I get my pizza
which is literally the worst thing ever
@coincoin wget
user1804599
> The runtime has also changed how it prints program-ending panics. It now prints only the stack of the panicking goroutine, rather than all existing goroutines.
user1804599
lol in the past you'd get 10000 stack traces if your program crashed with 10000 goroutines
the day when we would be able to change lines of code into pizza
we won't have to work
user1804599
08:17
yummy pizza
user1804599
italian pizza that is
Ven
Ven
Yo lounge
Oh cool avatar today
user1804599
08:38
hello
@coincoin We can. There's just a middleware (currency) in the middle.
user1804599
08:49
@Ven write me a parser in Scala.
Ven
Ven
@Zoidberg cmon, parsec is very easy to setup and use. why do you need me?
user1804599
Because it's boring.
Ven
Ven
what's boring is doing the same thing over and over again
yet you seem to enjoy that
user1804599
:(
Ven
Ven
08:55
jlui re-ti dé bal dsu
... wilx why do you consistently have the worst opinions on people.
user1804599
@Ven Do you know how C# and Java infer type arguments?
user1804599
09:13
bleh it deals with all the subtyping crap
@TheForestAndTheTrees lol, what?
Katie Hopkins is a fucking moron.
Ven
Ven
09:34
aw, I remember when I was still called user173790. maybe I shouldn't have renamed.
You don't have problem with the whole user173790 right? Just that '73790' behind 'user1'
@wilx well, fairly sure 'moron' has an exact meaning, so she either is or isn't
It's also apparently an ancient city, but I doubt that applies in this case...
"disused term for a person with a mental age between 8 and 12" yeah... I think Katie Hopkins would count as a moron then :D
@wilx really? she has the nose of a dragon
look closer, it's a dragon nose
pretty hideous
then she called people fat, hypocrite
don't female dragons prefer to eat fat people?
user1804599
My sort function takes five parameters.
Ven
Ven
09:54
good. let the parameters flow through you
user1804599
sortBy[t, t](binary<, id[t], xs)
@Zoidberg I assume the id[t] is the neutral element for t under binary< - what do you need this for when sorting?
user1804599
id[t] is the id function applied to the type t.
ummm, why would I need to pass that in
Ven
Ven
to transform the value into itself, obviously.
user1804599
10:01
@ScarletAmaranth because it's a parameter of id.
user1804599
id takes two parameters: the value to return, and the type of that value.
and regardless of its type, it's always id a = a, as in forall a. id : a -> a
user1804599
[t: @type](x: t) => x
congratulations, it looks like this for every t
why have the caller pass that in :-\
Ven
Ven
schwartzian-transform-style stuff
user1804599
10:06
@ScarletAmaranth because I have not yet implemented inference.
Ven
Ven
oh; lol
woot
water company gonna reduce my bills and I'm £100 in credit with them
now I just need to figure out how to get that money back
@Puppy extortion
@Puppy I'm assuming your next bills will be less until that credit runs out?
10:17
yeah
the problem is that the bill implies they'll be undercharging by £5 every 6 months
ls
Ven
Ven
I don't understand what the fuck is going on. In "webservice" project, we have a "Session" class, that stores stuff in the session (and adds a cookie id). Then at a higher level, in an actual module, this class is "overriden", using composition rather than inheritance... but it doesn't do the same or use the same interface
why we have two classes with the same name, but different interfaces, someone explain to me pls
er, it's not "overridden" at all using composition...
that's just "A class that uses the other class as part of the implementation"
Ven
Ven
I meant supplant rather than overriden
well why would you do the same thing and have the same interface for two different classes?
what's the point in having them?
Ven
Ven
one would extend the other, and add module-specific feature
10:20
better to achieve through composition than inheritance
user1804599
@Ven LSP in your face.
Ven
Ven
@Puppy yeah, but then I can't override any behavior, because the routing code uses the base "session". and since it's a different class with no superclass, I can't tell the DI the use the new one
that may be perfectly correct, depending on what the new one actually does.
@Zoidberg lol
Ven
Ven
@Puppy the new one is supposed to a few project-specific behaviors
wrt how sessions are managed
really, I'd rather do this by hand, instead of having to convince the DI.
10:28
alright codepuppy.co.uk is back up
omg nice, been waiting for it for days now! ^^
11 hours according to the timer on the message
well I can't connect
:(
works for me
besides hosting by github so blame them for any 404s ;p
10:43
omg puppy is in direct competition with @StackedCrooked?
another online code editor/compiler
ok I give up
350loc of JS in a single React component is just super awkward.
@Puppy vOv try working with functions that 'small'
-1
Q: Hello World Programm Does Not Work C++

istmirI have simple Problem. Code works not. I give file with code to Compiler but works not. Give error. Here is link to code: http://i.imgur.com/XNACg7J.png thanks you for answeres Sincery Yous Istmir

@Puppy god bless them and their infinite bandwidth
@thecoshman I can handle it much more easily in a typed language. In JS you end up with several places all trying to use the same identifiers :(
10:55
@HubertApplebaum didn't LRiO already do this for april fools
user1804599
> works not. Give error.

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