pretty sure it does a lot of ugly stuff by reference
all I'm saying is: people who run outdated software deserve to get hacked
and maybe if that becomes a more visible problem, we can move the needle towards people not lagging behind
distros are driven by people too
and if anyone has any better ways to make this problem more visible than by dropping 0day and getting milllions of outdated sites owned and rm'd, I'm all ears
I'm working a project, that has a minimum version requirement of 7.0.0
guess what happens when 7.0.x is EOL'd?
I'm going to drop it like a ton of bricks, that's what :P
I'll push one last update to the project~1.x branch that kills execution until the owner runs a command to upgrade to project~2.x which requires PHP 7.1.x
that's my way of constructively solving the problem
(project~1.0.x will auto-update, updates are Ed25519-signed)
no LTS option, even if I'm offered millions in support contracts
ten years from now, the only people who will be running outdated versions of my project in production are people who spitefully went out of their way to do so
so, really, there are two models at play here
1. the natural selection model, where everyone's website that doesn't update PHP gets deleted from the internet, haha too bad 2. the "immunization" model, where people are artificially made immune to these threats
I think both would change the ratio of sites that run EOL'd versions of PHP to sites that don't
so @NikiC do you have a third solution to propose? if not, which of the two would you rather see
(for the record: I'm interpreting any votes for "just leaving things the way they are" as a vote for the natural selection model :P)
the floor's open to anyone else who wants to suggest a third strategy too
@Scott - I'm talking about lawyers here, nasty bloodsucking sharks who can make judges and juries accept their word that deliberately introducing something in software is something that the developer should be liable for
Scott, I'm not trying to justify the "sue for anything society", but I am suggesting that your approach (whether joking or not) is one that will get you sued, and you'll lose in a court of law
@ScottArciszewski If I may inquire, why is it that you release polyfills, which allow use of new security features on old, outdated, unsupported PHP versions?
I mean that optimization problems are hard and it is easy to focus on a local optimum, while completely missing that it is, in fact, not the global one.
I am reasonably certain that your approach to "making the internet less insecure" is rather far removed from ideal.
the first is suboptimal because, well, a lot of people lose everything
the second is suboptimal because it requires people like wordpress developers to actually give a shit
which they clearly don't
is there a middle ground?
is there a magic third option?
I don't know
that's why I asked you if you had any
I mean, shit, you made PHP fast, who knows what crazy awesome ideas you could cook up?
if I sound frustrated, it's because this is a hard problem and every discussion I've participated in around it has been full of humans actively campaigning to be insecure
I was talking with Jenny Wong few months ago - their only way to measure whether a version should be dropped is adoption rate. Security is not as important to them as "owning" the web
"Integer Semantics" - the second word is unhelpful "ZPP Failure on Overflow" - meaningless to non-internals "Unicode Codepoint Escape Syntax" - that last word should be *sequence* "Big Integer Support" - we already have *support*, this is changing the primitive type "Null Coalesce Operator" - it's `isset()`, not `is_null()` "Name of Next Release of PHP" - it's the *number* of the next *major version* "Scalar Type Hints" - type *declarations*
even few devs working on wordpress.com told me that they still use the old hashing stuff because they can't switch on bcrypt for everyone (because compat)
Warning: get_included_files() expects parameter 1 to be unknown, integer given
LOL lol
^ first 5 min attempt, not a lot of tests broken so yay, now I understand why native functions arglists are treated differently than user land functions args
@marcio "but the arg count strictness is a bummer" - I have to ask. What was it that made you realise that strict arg count is a pain? Which appears to be a 180 degree change from the strict argcount RFC?
@Danack I'd like to have consistency. I could only propose the BC breaking change on a major release. Now that we can't bc break, the only alternative is going the opposite way. It's an antagonistic approach, but the objective is the same.
@marcio fyi 'antagonistic' sounds weird there.....either 'the reverse' or 'the opposite' sounds more natural. antagonistic implies some desire to deliberately anger someone.
@Danack really? in pt-BR "antagonic" == "opposite", any other meaning may come from interpretation but in general it's like saying "reverse" like in "antagonistic muscle".
Quick question: The only reason why an attacker can not recreate the unique token value hidden in HTML form is because they have no physical control of the victim's computer. Is this assertion right
@hello Maybe. But if the tokens are predictable enough, having access to the victim's computer makes little difference as the attacker can "recreate" a token that is about to happen. It's just a matter of perspective.
I am trying to create a password protected excel sheet using PHPexcel here is my code :
<?php
require_once '../classes/PHPExcel.php';
include '../classes/PHPExcel/Writer/Excel2007.php';
$objPHPExcel = new PHPExcel();
$objPHPExcel->setActiveSheetIndex(0);
$objPHPExcel->getAc...
i have two files one index.php and another phpsqlajax_genxml3.php
Here in file 1 i am getting value through browser url and storing that value in $driver_id variable.
Now i want to get that value in file 2 when my file 1 control goes to file 2. and using that $driver_id value i want to fire a q...
google.maps.MarkerImage has been deprecated since 2012. You should just do icon: "http://labs.google.com/ridefinder/images/mm_20_red.png" when you construct the Marker — duncan4 mins ago
hey friends i am working with google map api and php
PHP7 adds FILTER_VALIDATE_DOMAIN, but I can't find it in docs so have no idea what it's suppose to really do. Anyone have any info on it, or maybe want to update docs too?
So I'm using the FB SDK through composer which uses Guzzle 5.0, but my app is already using Guzzle 6.0. I can't have both installed at the same time, and neither are compatible with each other. Do I have any option other than redoing my app to use 5.0 and downgrading to it?
hello guys how to target a single input button using pastebin.com/1DJ8CqS2 i tried class, didnt work, i want individual buttons to be disabled, my script disables every input, coz i'm targeting the id
@HamZa the script i wrote disables the edit button, i want that, but since i have a fetch_assoc im creating many edit buttons and the cookie will disable all of them
what i want is to disable the one that i click on, not all of them
> Few people are saying I have to open up the terminal and type commands there. But I'm not getting What is terminal? Where it is? How to open it? What is root user and what is sudo user? What does each of the users do? What's the difference in between them?
can anybody tell me how can I prevent/secure my database from being hacked .. please don't suggest "you can use mysql_real_escape_string" that is being handled already... other than this if any?