Apparently I fail to understand the concept of using hmac to validate communication. The server will send a hashed hmac with a timestamp how do I validate it back when the client generates a new hash with the response timestamp? Or am failing to see its usability else where?
@Prix hmac's sign each method as being authentic. Each new message needs their own hmac I think. It's to stop someone being able to alter data by a man in the middle attack.
@Danack I understand that, but lets use this page websec.io/2013/02/14/… as an example we see 2 keys there where a public key seems to be sent to the client while they are hashing the content with the private key, so it will obviously not match client side
Public-key cryptography refers to a set of cryptographic algorithms that are based on mathematical problems that currently admit no efficient solution -- particularly those inherent in certain integer factorization, discrete logarithm, and elliptic curve relationships. It is computationally easy for a user to generate a public and private key-pair and to use it for encryption and decryption. The strength lies in the "impossibility" (computational impracticality) for a properly generated private key to be determined from its corresponding public key. Thus the public key may be published without...
The TL:DR is public-private key signing allows someone to use the public key to check that it was signed by the private key.
@ScottArciszewski for the outer layer I am using a pinned HTTPS certificate I just wanted to understand that hmac sample which you seem to have cleared it for me.
for every 1000 practitioners, you might have 10 experts
out of every 100 experts, you might have 1 that can claim to be a master
they're usually the rare overlap of raw aptitude and persistent acquisition of experience
when they're young, they're often thought to be gifted or some sort of genius
but they never let that get to their head, so they kept refining themselves
that's what a master is
whether through talent or determination (or both), a master is someone who excels at something beyond someone who merely knows it like the back of their hand
put another way, there is no rung higher than master
class ElementCollection implements \IteratorAggregate
{
/** @var \FCForms\FormElement\Element[] */
public $elements = array();
public function getIterator()
{
return new \ArrayIterator($this->elements);
}
}
class Form {
/** @var ElementCollection|Element[] */
public $startElements = null;
public function __contruct() {
$this->elements = new ElementCollection();
}
}
@Andrea Well, you maybe want to have overloading like class foo implements number and then you have various operations of the interface… so… I guess, should be interface, leaves the path open for this.
I think scalar_objects might be a good idea for arrays. not entirely sure for int/float/string due to weak typing, but maybe typehints alleviate that
Anyway, there's a bunch of interesting things we can do if primitive types become more class-like
Interface-based operator overloading can be done. int and float can implement \Num, but also your own Decimal or BigInteger or Ternary or whatever
We can have some abstract classes: int, float, string, bool could be subclasses of Scalar, int and string are ArrayKey (or just Key), int and float are Numeric, possibly
"the community needs to, collectively, invest serious effort in finding a remotely exploitable vulnerability in any/all EOL'd versions of PHP to give a strong incentive to stop running 5.2.x and 5.3.x in 2016" <- I don't think this will be a very popular initiative
"if distros want to be retarded," - it makes economic sense to not upgrade some large applications, but instead pay to just have security issues backported to older versions of software they depend on.
Calling people names because they have different priorities than software developers would like is not super awesome.
then those large applications are poorly written and probably have other security risks
look how deep md5() and unserialize() are embedded within magento
if companies want to build upon a festering nest of antipatterns and security holes, that shouldn't be a factor in whether or not a language moves forward