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10:02
There is a rat burrow at the edge of the chicken coop on the farm. The entrance is located the furtherest from where the two roosters perch at night, and in between the wooden outer layer and steel inner layer of the coop. It got me thinking: maybe wild animals can maintain their intelligence because the dumb ones get themselves eliminated in the hostile environment. Humans, on the other hand, build rather safe environment for ourselves, so the dumber ones can live safely.
Furthermore, animals like rats have to use their brains to work out all sorts of issues - dig burrows, find food, locate their nest at the the most advantageous place, hunt for insects and dodge predators. Humans, on the other hand, usually have only one profession at a time.
Are we, the humans getting dumber, in relation to, say , wild rats, because we don't eliminate dumb ones and not utilising our brains on broader functions, like rats?
 
4 hours later…
14:25
@Mgetz I always thought all thse protection mechanisms worked by using some kind of load balancing, allowing you to spread the attack. They keep it quite vague... They state that they compute a signature without saying much more. Are they using something very different to mitigate such attacks?
14:35
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn so most attacks are actually reasonably easy to identify? They don't look like standard traffic. They look like well... crap
so if you have an extremely lightweight proxy you can mitigate most of it really quickly by just dropping requests at the proxy level.
Cloudflare does that by basically providing frontend cache for cheap
so they block most requests to the server anyway by virtue of being that cache
add on they then have distributed ability to block. Even if someone hits one of their distributed servers they just block them
Also when I say crap I mean that. It's hard to generate a DDOS that looks like genuine traffic. Browsers are incredibly varied etc. So when you see 30k of the same outdated version of chrome running on "windows" you start filtering that content to see if it closes the connection or not
ditto badly formed packets
14:59
@Mgetz just write a piece of c code that sends a packets through a raw socket to eg their ssh server. That way you can’t be recognized by your browser or whatever. Also of it is enough distributed, ie you have enough different machines from which you cam attack it becomes increasingly hard to identify I’d think
15:24
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn those would be badly formed packets and would be dropped by the ISP before it even got there most likely
ISPs do a lot of mitigation too
also that wouldn't obsfucate your attack at all, the source is known because of how protocols work
 
4 hours later…
19:22
fcking sleezy salesmen. I asked for a quote to install 10 new windows in my house. First quote I received was 13k, second quote I receive from a competitor 27k. Sent an email to the second guy asked him why he is twice as expensive. "Sorry, that's a mistake on our side. I will discuss this. Would you like a new quote?"
I think I'll pass. Haven't even started working and already trying to screw me over
This would mean he made 10 mistakes in a single quote as he summed the price of each individual window
19:51
posted on April 30, 2024 by Blog Staff

In software development, handling notifications efficiently is pivotal, particularly in user interface scenarios. While traditional notification patterns inform handlers of changes, they often lack crucial state information. In this article, we explore the intricacies of managing stateful updates within the context of C++/WinRT, addressing challenges such as race conditions and ensuring that


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