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20:00
cd ~
Oops :D
wrong window
@Fabien also, you can simply write "cd" for that
Oh. Cool, was worth putting it in the wrong window then :)
I'm curious. How long have you used NIX?
This is just scary: stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/php (look at the OPs)
I think the average rep is about 200 something
@PeeHaa you could actually make a data query
20:08
Yeah good point
What's scary ? You mean helpvampires?
Might be a nice idea for some realtime service
@HamZa Low rep users everywhere.
Depends what you mean by used @tereško. Prior to about 2-3 months ago my experience was probably 1-2 setups through many attempts on VMWare. Then more seriously in the last couple of months.
I don't have an issue with low rep users obviously, it's just a sign imo
We might help them with a bounty if that scares you xD
20:11
@Fabien in that case you seem to be progressing adequately
@HamZa to give a bounty, one must have written an answer ... your cleverly plan is flawed
Yeah, amazing what being in this room has done for my skills tbh.
@tereško lol, good point hahaha
aaaaaaaaaaaaaand
all questions that are tagged with should be "on hold" by default
@HamZa a repwhore has appeared!
actually there are two hehe
@tereško I agree 99.999999%
@reikyoushin yeah, they are good in regex but they repfarm a lot :(
repfarmers everywhere ! — HamZa 8 secs ago
At this rate, I should just give up my 10K :(
@tereško Well he actually, mostly reached 100K by answering such questions
20:28
hell .. he didn't even understand what I was saying in the comment
@tereško link?
the CV-request few lines above
do you think godaddy will close a domain that issues malware? i just sent an abuse ticket but i doubt they will do something about it.. >.<
tereško it's almost useless to talk to them since they always come with arguments such as "I'm just trying to help"
@reikyoushin actually they might, because it can be perceived as risk to their ecosystem
20:33
its surprising how only sucuri has blacklisted the domain in question.. sitecheck.sucuri.net/results/robincreen.com#tab1
lol.. one of the ones that put that question on hold was one of the ones who answered
google, norton et.al says the domain is clean. >.<
that's because it might have a low rank
and the infection could be recent
@tereško the file in question was last edited 10/10/2013, is that still recent? how much users could already have been infected before the site was blacklisted. T-T
@reikyoushin all those XP users without AV :P
@reikyoushin I would assume that the freshness of blacklist would highly depend on how many users visit the site
@tereško well, could be.. hmm.
20:39
the AV companies do not scan all of the internet, instead they probably just aggregate data from security alerts that users have seen, provided by their local AV installation
if nobody visits the page, it does not get blacklisted
... at least that's how I would create such a system
20:55
sometimes I love linux
like when you install kernel headers so that you can compile a module, and it installs a different version header than you're running
I see you are trying to make a point ..
21:05
hey! the miner is running!
averaging 55 billion hashes per second :-)
not really a direct PHP question, but I think this is the most adequate web chat considering the chats with any onnline people :)
I've been studying the communication between the client and the server using HTTPS
i've elaborated this, and I would love to hear some feedback from you.

- Client starts an HTTP request to the domain example.com
- DNS resolves the IP address of that domain
- Before the request being executed, there is a verification on the server if it has SSL (or TLS) configured. If so, it does make a request to the client to establish an HTTPS request instead of HTTP.

- The client accepts the request.
- The server sends the certificate making proof saying that it is domain example.com, along with his public key
too many letter for me at this stage =/
Ahahah @tereško, a kinda complex I guess to be described in short words :P
21:09
@rdlowrey you could spare this guy a minute. I am fairly sure that you are one of people here who knows the most about HTTPS .. em ... stuff
user895378
let's see ...
@tereško thanks for reference :)
Bitcoin has been soaring the last month, eh?
@Suhosin must be happy if thats the case :)
user895378
@IvoPereira I'm going to comment but I'll reference the individual bullet points numerically so you can tell which one I'm discussing at any given time.
21:11
Chock it up to engineered hype and naive holiday season investors?
okay, thanks a lot @rdlowrey :)
@DanLugg blame China
@tereško Serious?
I haven't been following; just noticed some articles about it today since it broke 1000 USD
@DanLugg actually, yes
Wonder how many coffees it would take to read rfc2616
21:13
@tereško never new there's bitcoin that's "Made in China"
@Fabien It's surprisingly easy to get though, I found at least.
Damn, 176 pages. A whole book !
@Fabien RFC2616 = Request For Coffee 2616 times..
9
@DanLugg With the lack of pictures, I dunno :P
@Fabien Hey! It's got some ASCII art ... I think..
21:14
@Fabien my current project is "read through khronos.org/registry/webgl/specs/1.0 "
@tereško Any particular reason? I'll look into it later, but if you know off hand
Good lawd @tereško You'll need coffee and to lock the cat out of the room.
@DanLugg I don't recall the details. I am half asleep now and function barely at "normal human" level. The "recall of every article I managed to read today" functionality is NOT available at the moment.
@tereško Did you try turning yourself off then on again?
I downloaded a Head First Design Patterns eBook the other day (I do own the real book) for easy bed-time reading. Some bastard actually took a picture of each page to string it in to a pdf.
21:17
@DanLugg no .. but I m planning to
@Fabien did he include a selfie?
heh. Maybe in some CSI-style I can run a program and get a reflection off an ink-blob.
@Fabien I still prefer Design Patterns Explained. It used similar approach like "SQL Antipatterns" book: explain the pattern, give academic definition, explain what it actually does, where it should and should not be used
it's actually how I begun learning advanced-ish OOP
@tereško so is that the one i should read after i finish PoEAA?
before .. long time before you even start poking at anything from Fowler
21:20
@tereško eh?
I'll read SQL Antipatterns and see how it feels and consider DPE then @tereško
Yeah, we should just re-think the whole internet architecture. While we're at it, I have some feature requests for the universe... — Camil Staps Apr 5 at 18:45
^ lol
@tereško you mean i should've got that one first? well, i still have some time. i'm only 1/3 on PoEAA anyway..
@Fabien I never liked the "Head First" series. It takes too much of a "Hey there cool buddy! Let's go on a fantastic learning adventure with numbers and tables and structures and dragons and operators and bananas and stuff. Keep your chin up!" approach.
user895378
@IvoPereira You have it basically correct. This is how I would comment on the steps you provided:
user895378
21:24
1. Yes
2. Yes.
3. Client determines from the URI scheme (http:// or https://) whether or not a secure connection is intended. The request is not made specifically for an "encrypted connection"; it's made for whichever port was specified in the original URI. If no port is specified in the URI then port 443 is assumed.
(new) Client connects to the IP (determined via DNS in step 2) and PORT (determined from URI in step 3).
4-9. Yes. Once the socket is connected the client and server negotiate the SSL/TLS handshake details to use for this connection.
thanks @rdlowrey, gonna copy that to my textmate for better reading, gonna give u feedback in a moment :) thanks
@DanLugg Damn liberal pansies!
Yeah it does feel a little like that. Not formulated an opinion on whether I like it or not though.
@DanLugg I tend to find it annoying
user895378
@IvoPereira The only real difference is that the encryption isn't part of the actual socket connection process. It's negotiated on top of whatever protocol is in use.
@tereško Likewise. And, the pages are littered with pictures of hipster pseudo-geeks, using magnifying glasses to look at binary like they're reading the Matrix or something.
user895378
21:27
@Ivo Hence the name, Transport Layer Security ... the actual negotiation of encryption has nothing to do with the layer itself and is determined once the connection is established.
@rdlowrey so basically, just right before the communication starts, and after the confirmation of the certificate by the client, they combine the key exchange method (the algorithm, random key etc), and so the handshake is done. after that, the communication is done using that random key?
user895378
Right.
@HamZa that reminds me that I should look into something regarding quantized explanation for irregular malleability of spacetime as alternative for dark matter
that is decrypted using private key of server, right?
or something along those lines
21:29
there's a thing i'm a little confused. server has a public and a private key. but does the client have too? I'm not understanding how does it decrypt the asymmetric key.
@tereško I'll stick to OOP for the moment :)
user895378
@IvoPereira Let me find a good resource for you. Hold on, I have a link saved somewhere that makes the process fairly easy to understand.
@HamZa I like to learn "stuff"
Nice, thanks a lot @rdlowrey :)
216
Q: How does SSL work?

PolynomialHow does SSL work? I just realised we don't actually have a definitive answer here, and it's something worth covering. I'd like to see details in terms of: A high level description of the protocol. How the key exchange works. How authenticity, integrity and confidentiality are enforced. What t...

user895378
21:33
@IvoPereira This article does a good job of explaining public key cryptography IMO.
@tereško /me too, but then I waste my time in manga/anime or stackoverflow :(
Gonna take a look. Thanks for the resource @rdlowrey
@HamZa naah ... current;y I am reading only few mangas: Noblesse, Ability, Bleach and Trinity Blood
I see
security.stackexchange.com is long winded, and I love it.
21:41
Bleach? Do you not find it too DBZ'ish?
@Fabien it's still a good manga, the anime is full of fillers ...
I wish there was a episode -> manga anime site so you could pick up where you left off easier.
@DanLugg there are some good Q/A and sometimes I have those facepalm moments
I stopped watching the anime of bleach and naruto (because of the fillers)
Also, bleach anime is on-hold AFAIK
@Fabien I like the art style, I like side characters are able make decision without protagonist, I like how the "good guys" are fallible and morally gray, and I like the action =]
One major complaint for me was too many side characters.
21:45
though, it seems to suffer from power-creep
I certainly don't give two-shits about Chad and those guys.
Nice article @rdlowrey however I still have a doubt. Both client and server use assymetric key to encrypt content sent. However, to decrypt that content server uses its private key? What about the client? As the client only has the server public key, how does it decrypt the message received by the server?
@Fabien was ? The manga is still ongoing
is * :P
@Fabien and nobody gives a shit about them, not even the author.
21:46
lol
mwahahahaha
maybe they will show up a bit later as a plot device, but from last 50 chapters, they showed up in like 4 panels
Ah got it @rdlowrey. The client encrypts using server's public key, server decrypts using its own private key :)
user895378
@IvoPereira The public key is mathematically related to the private key. So when the client encrypts something with the server's public key then only the server can decrypt it.
user895378
@IvoPereira Ah yes, you beat me to it :)
21:48
Ahah, exactly that! Thanks a lot for the tips :)
user895378
@IvoPereira Extra credit: how do you know the server is actually the person/entity it claims to be?
There should be a good manga with some good programming stuff inside, or would that be a failure ?
Because it is certified by the CA? :)
@HamZa It'd do as well as a TV show probably :P
user895378
21:52
@IvoPereira Right. And during the handshake either party has the option of verifying the other party's identity against its own CA file of trusted certificate authorities. The reason why PHP's existing implementation is so dangerous is that it doesn't verify the other party's certificate with a CA authority by default.
user895378
So you can't be sure you're actually communicating with the entity you think you're communicating with.
@webarto you could replay with "I prefer girls"
lol
user895378
@IvoPereira I expect my RFC proposing a solution for this problem to be adopted as part of the 5.6 release. @Jack has also submitted some awesome patches to simplify verifying the other party's identity (via certificate fingerprinting) if you don't think certificate authorities are trustworthy.
Hmm, nice one @rdlowrey. So I check the CA present in the cert file of the server against a trusted certificate authorities, to see if it is a good one to trust.
user895378
21:56
Exactly. My RFC patch automates that whole process so people don't have to know anything about how it works.
user895378
ProTip: if you don't want the NSA to decrypt your information, certificate authorities probably definitely aren't trustworthy and you need to use certificate fingerprinting functionality added by @Jack.
@rdlowrey If NSA (or any spy agency for that matter) want your information there is nothing you can do. This is definitively not the point.
^ that
Another great tip @rdlowrey. By the way, what could be the reasons for client and server could not negoatiate the handshake? The negotiation does not start only after client verifying the origin of the server certificate?
user895378
22:00
@happy Yes, if they want your info that badly they can resort to human engineering, accessing your hardware, etc. Of course. But you can prevent them from decrypting it in transit.
encrypt all your stuff and next thing you know there is a secret court order forcing top cert authority to leak the key
user895378
@happy did you miss the part where I said that if you don't want the NSA to decrypt your data you can't trust CAs?
user895378
obviously. The CA system is broken because the government can force CAs to do what they want.
@rdlowrey definitively :(
so according to that, you cannot even trust trusted CAs @rdlowrey, and security of your information could be on... everyones hands?
22:03
time to go through backlog and then sleeps
NSA sound like jerk but this is about unbounded intelligence power. Every nice country must have intelligence gathering service.
user895378
@IvoPereira You can trust reputable CAs up to the point where you're doing something the government is interested in. Beyond that you can't trust that CA verification will keep you safe because governments can tell the CAs they have to assist them in accessing your communications.
user895378
As long as you aren't doing things governments might be interested in then the CA system will work just fine.
it could basically just advance a bit further the live man in the middle attack scheme, doesn't it?
user895378
But you can't ever win in a technology fight against the government. The only real solution is to affect political change through the regular channels.
user895378
22:05
@happy Right.
@rdlowrey step 1) don't store your data somewhere that connects to the internet step 2) ???? step 3) Profit.
user895378
@BenjaminGruenbaum For sure. Air gap FTW.
fact: hardware is backdoored
@rdlowrey no speakers or microphone either!
user895378
@BenjaminGruenbaum lol you read that one too, eh?
user895378
I'm really hoping that when April 1 rolls around the author will be like, "JK IT WAS ALL A HOAX AND NOW YOU'RE ALL PARANOID!"
Bah, there was a better article than that.
@rdlowrey it's not paranoia, if they really are tracking you
@rdlowrey So, a constant open and violent revolt?
> Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not after you
I love that quote (and that book, but that goes without saying)
22:10
Tomorrows a big day, x-ray to find out if I can start exercising again :D Fingers crossed.
user895378
Dear NSA: I do not condone @DanLugg's suggestions. I'm a peaceful skinny white man. Please don't read all my internet communication.
Read it during mandatory army service. Guess that added to the effect.
@rdlowrey Don't seem skinny in your photo
@rdlowrey PRISM PRISM JUDGE JUDY TERROR BILL CLINTON!
user895378
@Fabien I don't seem white, either.
22:11
Arrgh, I guess I've confused myself again.

Client to encrypt uses: assymetric key negotiated at the start of the connection
Client to decrypt messages returned by server: uses public key

Server to encrypt: asymmetric key
Server to decrypt: private key

@rdlowrey could you clarify me this?
I'm too slow for teh intarnetz
> I'm a peaceful skinny large white black man.
@rdlowrey White guy tan though. :)
Hopefuly you avoided the panda-eyes
@IvoPereira in asymmetric encryption usually the private key is used for decryption and the public key for encryption. So everyone can write messages to you but only you can read those messages.
@BenjaminGruenbaum and as the client, how can I see what does the server send me?
22:13
@rdlowrey you also are from "bible belt", which means, there is a high likelihood, that you are skinny white crazy person, with an arsenal enough to invade small island nation
@IvoPereira There is no client and server. There are two people, Alice and Bob and a third person called Eve trying to spy on them. Alice and bob want to transmit a message to each other.
user895378
@IvoPereira I'm actually walking out of the office right now. There are usually knowledgeable people around in here to help. Just keep researching and asking. If I'm around I'll help.
user895378
@tereško I'm working on the small arsenal!
@IvoPereira Alice wants to send Bob a message so she encrypts it using Bob's public key, the public key is not a secret so everyone can obtain it - this is how Alice got it, Eve got it too but it doesn't help him. The public key can only be used for writing messages to Alice not reading them. When Alice wants to read Bob's message she uses her private key - only she knows it and we know that since she never had to send it to anyone.
Thanks @rdlowrey :)
But how does Alice have Bob's private key?
22:16
She doesn't. Alice has Alice's private key and Bob's public key.
@IvoPereira while bob was exhausted and asleep, she stole it
Okay, let's try to apply this to a user connecting to an HTTPS server than.
If she wants to write Bob a message she uses his public key to encrypt it, and then he uses his private key to decrypt it.
Ahahah @tereško :P
Yeah, I've got that logic @BenjaminGruenbaum, however, I don't understand how do the user connecting to HTTPS could decypher a encypreted message that came from the server
as the user only has the server public key that came in the certificate
@IvoPereira What if the server has the user's public key? Then the server could encrypt messages to the user and the user would read them.
22:19
but do a user have a public and private key in his computer? if yes, how is that defined?
(That's not how HTTPS works, there's content negotiation and a handshake, not everything is done asymmetrically - but let's assume that everything uses standard RSA like encryption for now)
@IvoPereira TLS doesn't work that way ;)
ah, too late, @Benjamin was faster :)
This is actually a good place to start moserware.com/2009/06/first-few-milliseconds-of-https.html - it's a lot nicer than where I learned it from, but don't bother before you understand how encryption works.
There's even a very small guide to RSA there, it's pretty fair though it doesn't explain how the algorithm works or why but gives some intuition.
22:22
@IvoPereira SSL is only used to negotiate a secret key which is used in a normal symmetric cipher
Seems a good article but yeah, I would like to understand first how it works before. So, what is the symmetric key used for?

If Ana and Bob encrypt their content using public key and decrypting with private one.
asymmetric ecryption is actually really difficult, and is usually only used to encrypt a 256 bit or 512 bit secret key which is then used in another stream cipher (like RC4, AES, etc)
argh .... <?php $i+=1;} while ($i<=count($array)); ?>
@happy is good for all kind of stuff :P
22:25
@HamZa indeed :)
that's about 2 blocks away from me right now
@ircmaxell are you alright ?
@HamZa def, I just like taking pictures. and seeing as I was a fireman for a while ;-)
Whuuut you were a fireman?
22:26
yup
While learning to code or made the switch after?
I learned to code long before, and then took a break
I can't believe it lol
helluva switch
22:29
@IvoPereira You should try understanding Diffie-Hellman first. It's conceptually simpler and won't confuse you about who encrypts what, because it doesn't actually encrypt anything ;)
6
A: Best PHP Framework w/ AJAX Support?

Adam LermanCheck out XAJAX. No JavaScript required. Takes a few hours to get figured out but works really well.

^ wut ? no JS ?
make little sense. Maybe they meant js is optional for the framework to run but meh
@HamZa will grab a pic shortly
SHHHHIT, my NAS lost another drive
22:33
@ircmaxell maybe cause of the smoke ;)
You remind me, I should start doing backups
xD me too
no smoke here
@NikiC real men don't do backup, they just cry
2
lol
Basically @tereško is saying he's a real man :P
22:35
woot, got it back up!
Meh, if something happens to my data I'll just call the NSA and ask for a copy.
or not
@ircmaxell maybe it's actually MB which is failing .. or raid controller (if you have one ... not sure if that's a thing still)
crap
@tereško it's a QNAP, so no...
22:40
naah ... it has motherboard, you just cannot do anything about it when it goes tits up
fuuuuuu
I think it never actually rebuilt when I swapped out the last drive failure 6 months ago
said it did
but now it just says "invalid configuration"
WTF
lolwut
brick'd
22:48
Damn -_-"
> This question has an open bounty and cannot be closed
@HamZa add it to cv-backlog
flag it for a mod
^ or that
Well it's a nice post and all but there's no shown efforts. It just seems that the OP wants a ready made code stackoverflow.com/q/20174677
tereško you said something about backlog, how could I add it there ? I thought it was only a scrapper ?
@HamZa the scrapper would be exactly what I meant
ok, I think this system is dead
condolences
HDD 1 temperature 255°C/235°F
:O
> This question has an open bounty but OP is really looking to hire in a developer in exchange for SO rep. Questions must demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem.
22:56
it's .. emm ... melting
no, 255*C != 235*F
ever

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