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16:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes nice
I was gonna ask about the transport
@Rerito I'm generating keys per game. The secret parts get saved on your disk, and the public parts you are asked to send to the others. If you want something more secure you can simply use whatever means you have at your disposal to establish a secure channel for transport.
E.g. you can sign the output of pbmx using your regular GPG key and send it in an encrypted e-mail.
I'm really just handling the crypto that deals with fair shuffles and hidden cards.
Ell
Ell
my classmate is trying to convince me c++ is weakly typed because you can cast things :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh yeah you have no need to use symmetric encryption since it's email based
I started off just wrapping a lib that does all that, but the API was a bit like prove_shuffle(args, input_stream, output_stream), meaning it would only work in an interactive scenario.
So I had to break those methods that took streams as arguments into smaller non-interactive parts.
And I had to change some things in the protocol for practical reasons (otherwise simply revealing the top card of a deck would take weeks to resolve even over e-mail).
You can see the whole thing already assumes a separate communication channel exists.
Ell
Ell
sorry to pester but does anybody know of a dynamic language where one can do the equivalent of reinterpret_cast?
16:15
Git gud, gist blocked at work
(If anyone can think of a protocol for assigning distinct sequential numbers to people that is practically workable over e-mail and perhaps snail mail, gimme a shout!)
(I don't think it's hard or impossible; it's mostly that I didn't have the time to design it)
Ooops, fucked it up.
"Burn after reading" was on. And I read it to test.
lol
Ven
Ven
> Are video game programmers looked down upon by other kinds of programmers?
pretty much yes
Ven
Ven
except @Borgleader because he's the best
@R.MartinhoFernandes Actually any well known copy/pasta service is blocked (but fortunately online compilers aren't)
16:18
Is zerobin well-known?
@Ven double* instead of std::vector<double> because purrformance
Dunno but it may filter on "bin"
Oh and flamingdangerzone is blocked as well
Ven
Ven
PURR FER MEN [CE]
Well, it was
rmf.io isn't
@Rerito lol (rmf.io is the canonical domain now; also no, I still haven't fixed the formatting issues)
@Rerito Ugh.
> Are video game programmers looked down upon by other kinds of programmers?
So basically, in that sample, the player has to send coin-flip.public.pbmx to its counterparty
Right.
And they'd get another one from the other person too.
And the other player, upon receiving will run the quoted command to update the game
The next session would start with pbmx public-key coin-flip, and it would ask you whose public key you got, and filename.
And then it's ping-pong
How do you handle the parts of the game that should remain secret (like a card deck)
The basic idea is that you shuffle the cards, then encrypt each one with your key and send them in order. The other player then shuffles again, and encrypts your encrypted cards and send them back in his new order. This way no one knows the order, and no one has full control of the shuffle.
@Rerito it's encrypted
For Alice to peek at the top card, Bob will decrypt the top card with his key and send the result to Alice. She then decrypts with her key and has now the result.
If everything has to transit via email, that may be cumbersome
16:28
With commutative keys encryption/decryption order doesn't matter. (This is not how it actually works because commutative keys are too messy, it seems, but it's the same spirit)
@Rerito Any operation will have to be three messages regardless.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you mean cipher(shuffle(deck)) and shuffle(cipher(deck)) produces the same output?
(provided shuffle produces the same permutation of cards of course)
@Rerito No, cipher(keyB, cipher(keyA, card)), and cipher(keyA, cipher(keyB, card)) are the same.
You encrypt the cards individually and then shuffle the ciphertexts.
So, Alice sends shuffleA(map(cipherA, deck)), and Bob sends back shuffleB(map(cipherB, shuffleA(map(cipherA, deck)))).
I don't think I get it
Let's go with the coin flip example, which will be modeled as a deck of two cards (the top card is the face-up side of the coin, the bottom is the face-down side).
Because when Bob receives that shuffled ciphertext, provided knowledge of the RSA mode or w/e that are used he can decipher the deck since he has Alice's public key
16:33
@Rerito She uses the public key.
Oh alright
Above I always use "encrypt" to mean "make unreadable to others" and "decrypt" to mean "make readable".
So in the end, the "shuffling" takes place in two stages
Encryption aside, it's equivalent to apply a sequence of two shuffling
Yeah. It's the protocol I use when shuffling a physical deck with a small number of cards.
Say, if there are only three cards in the deck, I will shuffle it under the table, and then pass it to another player for them to shuffle.
Because three cards are easy to keep track of and I don't trust myself to not do so.
btw @R.MartinhoFernandes did you know that both FB and Google use Yubikeys/U2F extensively for all employees?
16:40
Quick break sorry, I need to do actual work ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@Rerito But I think I can minimize the number of messages with many players. Say, if there are N players, the minimum is 2N messages (it needs to go once to each player, and then the final result needs to be broadcast)
The library also includes zero-knowledge proofs that I think I will make optional.
hello guys!
I'm new here
It's additional stuff going around, and the only thing they ensure is that no mistakes are made.
Like, you can prove that your shuffle does contain the same cards (without you knowing the cards, and without having to decrypt them).
This is good for games like poker where you don't want to have to reveal the cards of players that folded or won, but still be able to guarantee they didn't cheat.
But it's not so important for other games, so I can see dropping the proofs.
Or maybe I can piggyback the proofs along with other messages. I'll see.
The reason I want to test this with real people (instead of just firing up separate instances) is to have an idea of how practical this is.
@R.MartinhoFernandes hi!!!
nwp
nwp
@Verideth You have arrived in the lounge. Grimy looking regulars eye you with distrust. On the floor you see puddles of blood where previous visitors were clobbered to death. You are expected to read The Rules and not ask questions. On the outside you can see the Q&A. What do you do?
11
I should make some text adventure to get this out of my system.
16:49
@Verideth Hi.
Anyway, I'll post when I have more of the UI working (just key exchange for now)
@Ven Awww ty.... wait... why am I the best?
suspiciousness intensifies
Ven
Ven
Cuz the catface says so :3
@nwp just do it!
17:12
@nwp Do it.
17:32
@Borgleader
I'm sorry, my printer is out of paper. — YSC 17 hours ago
Please make a program — Abhay Pratap Singh 17 hours ago
Please write the code @pm100 — Abhay Pratap Singh 7 hours ago
@Borgleader Godwin's Law in 2 comments:
They do not have personal feelings to me but they may have personal feelings to some position. Nazis killed jews not because they do not like them personaly but because they are jews. — Marat Zakirov Dec 26 '16 at 10:32
@Mysticial tfw I code on something that's not even 1/4 as good as that. @_@
17:56
@Mysticial Please make me a code that will manufacture money and make me rich. Oh, and do it for free because I matter, and you don't.
user1804599
> Your options in Terraria are limitless.
user1804599
Bullshit. Terraria is finite.
@rightfold How often is "infinite" used to mean really and truly infinite? Even in the real world, and mention of "the possibilities are (infinite|limitless)" is obvious nonsense. Laws of physics, total resources, etc., essentially always impose limits.
Article "Study: racism and sexism predict support for Trump much more than economic dissatisfaction - Vox" links to study. See Figure 3 there (also on the article page).
While I can accept that the more racist a person is the more likely the person voted for Trump, I do not see how from that (or any other part of the study) follows that most/all/many/majority/etc. Trump voters were highly racist.
(I also have problems with some of the questions choices the authors make, but that is secondary.)
18:16
@Mysticial Haha yeah I saw that trainwreck earlier
@Mysticial Go big or go home I guess?
@wilx Quite true--the evidence (even if we just assume it's correct) doesn't support the conclusion. What's new?
@JerryCoffin Nothing, I guess. :D
hi! where could I ask about installing an OS in a computer?
not here
18:32
@wilx Not all Trump voters are racist. But Trump voters didn't consider racism to be a dealbreaker.
@QuicoLlinaresLlorens You could ask here, but the most likely result would/will be mocking whatever OS you were trying to install. And yes, we're pretty much equal-opportunity mockers (so to speak) so any OS you choose, we'll mock it. The only way there's any real chance of your receiving actual help would be if you started with something like: "I'm writing my own OS in C++, and working on making it easier to install..."
@JerryCoffin hahahahhah, good one
if you do that you'll be double-mocked for writing an OS
@JerryCoffin Well we mock whatever rightfold likes right now way more.
18:34
thanks
I think I will be triple mocked, because I am trying to install win 10
> Now I'm specifically good when its comes from complexity
Fuck me.
I meant « I'm not specifically good when its comes to complexity ».
Seriously, I shouldn't try to write complicated things when I'm tired.
@EtiennedeMartel Probably--but he's apparently accustomed to it, and @QuicoLlinaresLlorens isn't (yet) so fair warning seemed to be in order.
Xeo
Xeo
This is why I don't like autofill in web forms. #phishing #security #infosec https://t.co/mVIZD2RpJ3
Well that's nice.
@Morwenn s/ when I'm tired//
@JerryCoffin You meanie ç____ç
Xeo
Xeo
18:37
@Morwenn But you just said you are good with complicated things. :>
@Xeo You too ç__ç
@Morwenn I certainly try to avoid writing complicated things in general.
Me too, but I needed to write about the complexity of my algorithm :o
Apparently it's between O(n log n) and O(n log n log log n) depending on the available memory.
@Xeo Back when it was all about filling in the license info for a single-user program, I got in the habit of filling it in as my name being "everybody" and my work place as "earth" so it'd pop up the splash screen saying: "this program is licensed to everybody at earth". Seems to apply equally well to web forms.
@Morwenn Given how close "log log n" is to "constant", I'd just leave it as "n log n" except in the very most formal situation.
@JerryCoffin I love to be very formal for the sake of it :D
Who here works in FinTech?
Nice, employee discount for software increased to 100%
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn I'm no good at complexity either!
Apparently 2^n = O(2^2n)
who would have thunk it vOv
@Ell That's why I asked the question on CompSci.SE :p
Ell
Ell
I suppose because it's a constant
also n^(loglogn) = big omega(n^2), I had no idea how to solve this one really
I mean where has n^loglogn ever cropped up :V
18:54
Where I learnt that O(n log (n / log n)) = O(n log n - n log log n) = O(n log n).
I guess that logarithms aren't intuitive enough to me :/
Ell
Ell
I can do LHS to middle
but not middle to RHS :P
O(n log log n) is less significant than O(log n), so you can just drop the n log log n since it's an additive operation.
Ell
Ell
ah ofc >.<
I find complexities very unintuitive though
the reasoning seems too handy wavy
> This a geometric series, thus in the limit the sum is O(n2). The depth of the tree in this case does not really matter; the amount of work at each level is decreasing so quickly that the total is only a constant factor more than the root.
I just need to learn the master method off by heart.
I am going to be destroyed in this exam >.<
@Morwenn No, O(N log log N) is greater than O(log N).
Or are you missing an N in the second one?
@Mysticial I'm missing the first n: it was supposed to be O(n log n), sorry.
19:05
ah
O(log log N) in most cases can be considered constant.
I guess so.
As far as practical computing goes with real computers, almost everything has a hidden O(log log N) in front of it because you will overflow integer counter types which need to be handled by larger (and slower) integer types.
But so far, hardware has been able to mask that. Since 64-bit computers can handle 64-bit integers as fast as 32-bit integers.
@Mysticial ...except for things like factoring large numbers, where the size of a number is exactly the "N" that gets used.
@Mysticial ...unless you use SIMD, of course.
@JerryCoffin A lot of the bignum stuff is where the O(log log N) stuff tends to appear independent of the one implied by integer counters.
Large integer multiplication is a good example of that where you will hit "multiple levels" of log log N overhead before finally running out of address space.
Well, at the end of the day, I can safely brand vergesort as an O(n log n) sorting algorithm.
Ell
Ell
19:18
is that your algo?
Yup.
More than a full-fledged sorting algorithm, it's more of a thin layer to exploit sorted subsequences, that is almost free when there aren't such sequences. It can fall back to virtually any other sorting algorithm.
Ell
Ell
nice :3
n log n is the best for comparison only sort right?
Yes.
Yesterday, I made it fall back to ska_sort for shit and giggles :D
The overhead when it doesn't find sorted sub-sequences is almost unnoticeable.
Now the guy wants to incoporate it into ska_sort by default.
Have you spoken to @orlp? He was working on another sorting algorithm some time ago?
We've been speaking for months now. The « official » version of vergesort falls back to his algorithm.
@Morwenn I would almost call vergesort a heuristic rather than an algorithm; it verifies the assumptions that make other algorithms efficient
Ven
Ven
20:26
I guess I'd need to have a computer like @Mysticial's for intellij/scala not to run dogslow
Spoiler: even such PC won't be enough :D
20:38
@Aaron3468 Hey, it still performs a k-way merge if needed.
It's an algorithm with Mor <3
The C# room gets all the attention
Aw :3
@MichaelHCameron no one cares about C
20:45
@milleniumbug ^
no one cares about C indeed
yes no need to post the same link twice
I'll delete it in 30s
ah but you're not getting the point
well, yeah, I don't. Do I need to listen to the entire thing to get it?
it's 3h
no that's just part one
the full thing is probably closer to 10 hours
20:49
^ I assume the ... means you're listening and will let me know when finished
i'll wait
@milleniumbug You're weak :p
@Morwenn wow that's an internet veteran
also lol there's a video where someone watches this video
we need to go deeper
@Ven Firefox and flash lag on my 5960X @ 4 GHz.
It's not funny.
Granted, the processor itself doesn't matter since neither of those are well threaded.
@milleniumbug Hehe, I was pretty sure there would be something like that :D
But the fact that FF and flash lag on a Haswell core @ 4 GHz is very wrong.
How the fuck can they expect it to run on anything else?
20:55
The comment, "I like the part when he was watching the video" needs more likes
Ell
Ell
@Mysticial you're not supposed to run flash
you're supposed to uninstall it :P
@Ell you're not supposed to run flash, you're supposed to run away from flash
Ell
Ell
(also I'm betting FF wouldn't lag if you removed flash)
@Ell I'd love to get rid of flash, but then I can't watch anything on ESPN.
Or anything sports related.
Ell
Ell
sure you can
there is cool application just for this
20:59
Honestly, flash ads are so slow. There are some pages that load 90% in ~500ms, including part of the video, but then the ads take 10 seconds to load before the page becomes responsive
@Ell fuck apps. If I can't watch it in a desktop browser, I'm not gonna watch it at all.
Ell
Ell
@Mysticial I meant just application :3
you can watch it on your desktop
Since I began using adblockers, I rarely if ever have those issues with flash or html5.
Ell
Ell
see if it has ESPN support
it will be less laggy than flash :V
ah
no support :(
Question.
That has nothing to do with programming.
Has anyone here ever done a full-body shave?
21:11
Answer.
Not really.
I am trying to figure out how to do one, or at least cover my legs and arms.
The problem is that some areas are okayish and will quickly become worse after being shaved.
Ell
Ell
No idea :V
... Woooorse?
Ell
Ell
sounds like a terrible idea :P
21:13
Sometimes you need to shave certain areas...
I know hair tends to grow back with a vengeance when you shave it.
RE: my goddamn face.
4
Well, you'll definitely want a lot of astringent because you'll be getting ingrown hair everywhere if you shave. You might be best to use an electric trimmer
@ThePhD For example I never shaved my arms: the hair there is pretty thin and has seen enough sun not to be dark. If I shaved them, the cut section would just appear darker because it's larger than the tip of the hair, and would regrow dark anyway.
I bleached them once or twice though. It's enough.
Aftershave is great if it's just your face, though I prefer unscented because I don't need to suffocate in cologne fumes for the rest of the day
Ahhh.
21:15
Now, it depends on people and areas of the body.
Well, my hair is black.
So it's never going to blend in. :B
The real question is, how do you shave your back?
Mine is dark brown.
And my skin isn't pale, so that's never going to blend in well if I bleach it. :B
Oh, my skin is so white it burns your eyes.
21:17
Guess I'll stick with being hairy for now...!
I do shave my legs though. But in the direction of hair to avoid ingrowing hair, which leaves annoying spots.
Now, the best way to be less hairy is to take testosterone killers, but then you've got a problem of hormonal balance and you need to take female hormones. This is exactly what I'm doing.
I mean.
I don't want to do all that.
There's also laser hair removal. But non-extreme hair removal methods are generally disappointing x)
I just want to be able to wear longer socks
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD why do you want to remove full body hair?
21:20
and not have my legs go "HEY WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU DOING JESUS CHRIST WHAT THE HELL MAN?!".
Ell
Ell
is your hair so thick as to prevent you from wearing thick socks? :P
@Ell I guess? It ALWAYS feels SUPER terrible to wear long socks that aren't made of the finest silk.
And even those make my legs feel super weird.
@ThePhD Just shave them in the direction of the hair every few weeks then. Just what's needed to avoid ingrowing hair and curly-shitty hair.
I guess shaving them takes me 15-20 minutes, so it's a bit annoying, but I can live with that :p
By the way, we've got a new track :D
Ell
Ell
grats
not my kind of music unfortunately :(
-2
Q: Want to see the opcode of my function

Milad I want to write a function, which reads bytewise a function (==in opcode), but something always goes wrong and I don't know what. Can you please also explain why I have to write 0xff? (Because char =1 byte and if I cast int a=(int)(*x) //i.e.char x=0xc3 It will print ffffffc3. I know int =4 byte...

initially read this title as a question
21:33
@Ell Too bad, but thanks anyway :)
@Mysticial @Borgleader
also could be a pick up line
"hey, wanna see the opcode of my function?"
@milleniumbug My thought exactly.
@EtiennedeMartel a bit
@R.MartinhoFernandes So I have just sent an email to ~20 Czech EU MPs regarding this with a link to the video. I wonder if I will get any kind of response. :)
21:59
@Mysticial omg...

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