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Wes
Wes
12:00
so i followed this guy but i don't think he is @NikiC
@nikitonsky, Novosibirsk
Clojure, DataScript, Rum, FiraCode, AnyBar
12.5k tweets, 2.8k followers, following 233 users
but nice mustache.
Well in fact this is a question that I will pose the room as whole: Alice has a database of phone numbers. Bob needs to check whether a given phone number is in Alice's database. Bob does not want to give that phone number to Alice until he knows that she doesn't have it already. Alice does not want to give Bob direct access to her database.
That's impossible, right? Or is there some clever mechanism I am missing? I pinged you directly @ScottArciszewski because it seems similar to public key cryptography and you have a good grasp of cryptography theory (better than me, anyway).
@JoeWatkins Gonna be cached anyway :)
@Wes well, @NikiC is "Nikita Popov"
Wes
Wes
i couldn't notice the difference in the name, i was totally captured by the mustache :D
@NikiC this lead to ... PHP 5 ... :D
but yeah, that's true ...
12:04
@DaveRandom Sounds impossible, both Alice and Bob don't want to exchange information for "free" without some assurances, which they can only get by exchanging that specific information. So, yeah that's a problem.
the decl nodes can use NUM_CHILDREN shift ?
@JoeWatkins In practice, it is often important to a) delete nodes and b) merge nodes into a parent array
@JoeWatkins They have a fixed size right now (I think 4)
oh yeah ofc
@DaveRandom would Alice be open to storing a one-way hash of the numbers alongside them? :)
@DaveRandom Bob can give Alice his public key and the encrypted phone number (with his public key), Alice encrypts phone number with public key and checks if it matches
12:05
@NikiC hmm ...
we can allow this ?
or yeah, any kind of one-way hash...
Bob sends Alice the hashed phone number, Alice checks if she has it, etc
@FlorianMargaine Oh yeh, this would actually work
we can always pass parent I guess ?
@DaveRandom am I mssing something here? Why not hash the number and compare it?
I think I have been overcomplicating it
12:07
> Bob does not want to give that phone number to Alice until he knows that she doesn't have it already.

but wants to know if she has it?
but as you mentioned validation is scary, non-existent, and scary ...
f markdown
@FlorianMargaine once again beat me to it... :(
That guy should just go to work like the rest of you :p
@SergeyTelshevsky Use case: Bob is passing sales leads to Alice, Alice only accepts a lead if she doesn't already have it, Bob don't want to give out a lead's information unless he knows Alice is going to buy it (otherwise Alice could just take the number and poach the lead).
12:09
:D
@DaveRandom then yeah, Alice should be storing hashes and Bob should send only them..
@FlorianMargaine I can't see how that would work, are you saying bob encrypts with the pubkey (and alice cannot decrypt), but she can also encrypt every number with that pubkey to compare?
@PeeHaa imagine if I was unemployed...
So a hashing mechanism would need to be something that cannot be easily reversed with a brute-force attack (the plain text is of a known length and the first character is known, the entropy is also very low because everything is digits)
that's an expensive operation
12:11
@Leigh yeah, hashes are better
@FlorianMargaine that's why you should never run mvn install with the -T flag
@DaveRandom well, password_hash should be enough?
@Gordon mvn?
@Leigh An indexed column of hashes would need to be stored in Alice's DB for it to be practical
@FlorianMargaine no, you'd need a fixed salt
12:13
@Leigh why?
otherwise bob's hash would differ from alice's stores hash
@FlorianMargaine Dude. You would single single handedly solve all problems and then some :)
err
can't you simply get the salt from the hash?
iirc the salt is in the hash itself with password_hash no?
12:13
@FlorianMargaine yes, I do java nowadays
@Gordon poor soul
it is, but you can't reverse the hash, leaving you back at the step where you'd have to re-hash every number with the supplied salt, and with bcrypt that is really expensive :p
@Leigh right
@FlorianMargaine Yes, but Bob would have to use a known salt for each phone number otherwise it wouldn't be indexable. And unless you use a constant salt, you'd be able to derive the number (or a list of candidates) from the salt
so storing a column with data encrypted with Bob pubkey is probably a good idea
12:15
what if it's not just bob, what if it's bob and 1000 others
although that'd be a huge index
better to use alice's pubkey
@Leigh but then she can know Bob's leads...
aha, of course :) crypto so simple eh
@FlorianMargaine its not that bad. at least you get to compile stuff and slack
12:16
I think in this use case using something that's not practical to brute force within, say a day or two on mediocre commercial hardware would suffice (I'm not trading data with Google)
Would a SHA hash of some variety satisfy that?
@DaveRandom some kind of sha iteration?
@NikiC I'm not sure we need to worry about removal of elements, because you just set a handler for that particular kind of list, right ?
or fixed salt + sha iteration
like 1000 or so
Possibly, this is where I need someone who understands this better than me to tell me what would be suitable
well, drupal uses that
12:17
/cc @ircmaxell ^^
the fixed salt and the number of iterations is per site though
@FlorianMargaine well that's an argument
@SergeyTelshevsky for password hashing? something used by millions of people and reviewed by a lot of security researchers? (including @ircmaxell) yes, that's an argument :)
12:18
@Leigh err... do you have something more... human?
@FlorianMargaine having zero-knowledge of things is very human
you only need to open up a newspaper to get the proof for that
@SergeyTelshevsky iterated a variable (per-site) number of times
@FlorianMargaine but that only adds up to brute forcing time
12:21
@SergeyTelshevsky ... like any hashing mechanism?
@FlorianMargaine hmm, actually, I don't think it's a good system after all, ignore it
@DaveRandom uh... that sounds very hard to not brute force easily, no matter what the hashing mechanism is, only if the hashing itself is voluntarily super slow
Lets go with the fact that it has to be simple for Bob to implement, hash seems the most reasonable way
(depends on how long the numbers-only string is obviously... but still)
BTW @DaveRandom at the very least you would also need a signature imo
12:23
@FlorianMargaine UK phone numbers, so only 11 chars and the first is always 0
@FlorianMargaine I think that the brute force time is the least of the problems when speaking about integer hashing
@DaveRandom so it's about 10k possible cases for every number? (I'm not good at maths)
or 100k?
@SergeyTelshevsky ?
Think of it as 34-bit unsigned integers (the entropy is lower than this)
10**10, so 1b possible combinations
but using knoweldge of the domain you can reduce it considerably
yeah... you probably want to use a voluntarily-long hashing... but it's easy to make a rainbow table...
12:26
ok, TWO HASHES!
one based on a fixed public salt, one generated at runtime based on a shared secret
so you probably want Bob to send a salt and have Alice re-hash all of its leads...
Woops.
misread 512->1
12:28
@SergeyTelshevsky also, drupal adds a 64-chars salt
but not much of a difference in time..
@FlorianMargaine salt wouldn't help here at all..
static (known to both sides) salt would have no effect, while dynamic would be an overkill to check against for each record
I like the flags about foreign language stuff. I always validate them even though I have no clue what they say
I call it the in dubio pro english principle
hmmm, since we're dealing with numbers, maybe this is a good candidate for the homomorphic properties of RSA, I'll have a think
@SergeyTelshevsky for the total hashing time, it would
basically you can perform an operation on an RSA ciphertext, and the plaintext has the same transformation performed on it
12:31
(since you sent me a link with microtime, I thought that was what you wanted to talk about.)
@DaveRandom hang on... bob doesn't want to give it to alice until he has proven that she doesn't have it? If she already has it, it doesn't matter if she is given it again...
unless it's a deal where he'd sell it to her if she doesn't have it
@Leigh this
Alice won't accept leads she already has, but Bob doesn't want to leak information so Alice can't claim she already has it when she doesn't and then steal it
(I'm not sure why this can't just be done with some legals but I do what I'm told)
Well, if it's practical. But I'm thinking the correct answer here is "no, you can't have it".
4
Q: Can I prove set membership and uniqueness without revealing the element?

DeiwinAssuming a publicly known set $\Psi$ with $N$ unique elements. I have a set $\Sigma=\{\sigma_1,\sigma_2,...,\sigma_m\}$ where $m\leqslant N$. I would like to publicly prove that all the elements in $\Sigma$ are unique and are also elements of $\Psi$. I would like to do this without actually rev...

@FlorianMargaine yeah, I mean iterating pretty much doesn't help
I don't understand that segfault
Stupid opcache…
12:39
@bwoebi which one?
@NikiC multi-types branch
-> 617 fbc->internal_function.handler(call, ret);

^ handler is a NULL pointer
(lldb) p (char*)fbc->internal_function.function_name->val
(char *) $2 = 0x00000001024b6078 "C"
^ and this is the WTF
I have no function named C there (and definitely no internal function named C)
@Leigh lol yeh cos I totally understand those answers and they don't make me feel stupid at all
6
@NikiC Is that error known to you?
@DaveRandom thank you
12:43
@bwoebi nope
@NikiC and when I rename the typehint from C to D, the function name becomes D too
Wes
Wes
@DaveRandom oh i thought it was just me :B
@DaveRandom forward it upstream :)
@Leigh That will indeed serve to get people off my back, but will make me look like a twat :-P
I'm guessing today is SO Chat Flag day. Must have missed the memo
12:46
@NikiC do you see any obvious mistake in the opcache handling here: github.com/php/php-src/pull/1887/… ?
@DaveRandom "Yes it's possible, but will require hiring someone to decipher this."
@Gordon Those must be old. Here's what it looks like fresh
@Machavity I know that one. I linked it here a few weeks back :)
@DaveRandom Maybe take your question to crypto.stackexchange then
so we can all flag it as a dup of the one you linked
12:54
\o/
@Leigh I've sent a summary of this conversation and the problems highlighted to the dev at the other end, I'll see where it goes from here. Thanks for your thoughts though, it has definitely helped me to understand the problem better, if nothing else
Lets see if we can dig up any problems arising from a fixed bcrypt/scrypt salt, if you aim for a minimum of 1 second to hash, you're still looking at over 300 years for a full table of every number (including ones that don't make sense)
and lets face it, anything over 5 years is someone elses problem ;)
yeah, worst case, change the salt every couple of years
@Leigh Because this does matter in this case, the set of plaintexts is 0[127][0-9]{9}
so 3 * (10 ** 9)
(right?)
which is 3bn
13:07
@FlorianMargaine I'm not sure about this, Alice doesn't want to have to do several days of re-hashing every couple of years
Note also that I have no idea what the size of the pool of numbers is, so it may not actually be practical to generate all those hashes in the first place
but it is an option
@DaveRandom worse then, it's 10**8
yes
right
Still >9 years to generate the whole table
you checking 1 number at a time, or sets?
1 at a time
ok, so the hashing overhead can be easily masked
13:11
Yeh, 1 second is fine as long as the database is small enough that pre-computing the hashes is not too expensive
@DaveRandom this is when you make the case to establish yourself as the trusted broker and take a cut of every transaction
@PaulCrovella I was actually thinking about this but I don't think they'd ever go for it :-P
Also I'm not a neutral party
then this is when I make the case :p
@Leigh Are you sure about this?
I have confused myself I think :-(
@DaveRandom 9 digits, hmm, but could be all 9, so effectively 10 digits, so you're right I guess
13:17
Right, good, I thought I'd broken myself. I mean there are a few invalid phone numbers in that set, but it's barely any in context
yea you were right
maybe,... now I'm confused
Ok, yes you're right, 3b, so approaching 1k years to make a full table, not accounting for advances in computing power :)
or parallisation
or both
plus you don't have to make it completely unfeasible to brute-force, just more expensive than buying it
@NikiC I'd be thankful if you could give this opcache issue a look … I doubt my ~20 added lines are fundamentally wrong… I wouldn't be surprised if there's a deeper issue in opcache…
@DaveRandom the "proper" solution is definitely a broker that both Alice and Bob trust though...
13:27
@FlorianMargaine the broker would need to own a copy of the database though, otherwise you'd just monitor queries to it
^
It would only need to have the numbers in it though, wouldn't need any other data so that might make them more open to it
@bwoebi sorry was away, will looks now. are you sure it's due to opcache?
@Leigh or simply have a special access to Alice's db
@NikiC yes, without it works fine
(via an API or w/e)
13:38
What's a decent method of having persistant user recognition on a login form after their session expires?
@bwoebi and with optimization_level=0?
hm no, you're right, it'd need a copy
@FlorianMargaine alice could use the query log
Only thing I can think of is storing a hash as a cookie, which points to a user ID in a table.
13:39
@NikiC in that case it works again
@bwoebi aren't you storing the old pointers there?
i.e. shouldn't you do the string interning first and then the array?
voteleave.co.uk this is literally the best thing ever (context)
@NikiC nah, the calc is doing the string interning
@bwoebi yeah, nevermind, that's not it
@bwoebi ah. are you adding any new literals anywhere?
You know Rick released some songs recently and they're not bad.
13:43
@Fabor I know, I can't tell whether I'm disappointed or not
He's aged well too.
@bwoebi Can you quickly bisect the optimization flags to check which pass is causing this?
@bwoebi Ah, yes, I see that you are adding cache_slots
You need to update the literals pass in that case
to specify how many you're using
@DaveRandom I can't come up with a good scheme that isn't susceptible to either a precomputed brute force (mitigated by computational overhead), or requires a transformation applied to the entire set for each query... Thinking of a hybrid approach where numbers are split into buckets, but it becomes easier to brute force as the bucket fills
@NikiC thanks!
like, H(number / 1000) as an index, then a per-query hash of the last 3 digits
so Alice only has to rehash up to 1000 each time
but that's easy to brute force.. damnit
13:52
@Leigh What's this about?
@NikiC Dave needs a scheme for determining if an item is in a remote set, without revealing the value of the item
2 hours ago, by DaveRandom
Well in fact this is a question that I will pose the room as whole: Alice has a database of phone numbers. Bob needs to check whether a given phone number is in Alice's database. Bob does not want to give that phone number to Alice until he knows that she doesn't have it already. Alice does not want to give Bob direct access to her database.
@Leigh With the cost of pre-computing the brute force lookup table on the order of years I may be able to sell it. In this real-world use case, it's a safe assumption that alice is not going to devote the computing time to it, the monetary cost would be too high to make it worthwhile (these are SMEs, at the end of the day, they don't have spare tin to throw at this because they payoff is too low)
It doesn't need to be a perfect solution, only "good enough™"
@Leigh Interesting.
@DaveRandom try to sell the broker solution first...
13:53
I've already proposed it :-)
@Leigh This sounds somewhat similar to password protocols, doesn't it?
@NikiC there are range proof systems, but they seem to be for proving a single item, not whether the item is part of a set. The set only contains up to 3 billion potential values, so feasible to brute force
@NikiC It's not really, with a password protocol you narrow down the item being proven to one, by username/id
@Leigh Cryptographic hash and other side responds with all collisions?
But as you said:
> susceptible to either a precomputed brute force
@Leigh And the set size is presumably too large for a linear scan?
Set contains unknown number of elements, but maximum of 3 billion
@kelunik This is what we've suggested, A maintains a DB of values and hashes, where the hashes are computationally expensive, but can be indexed for a decent search speed
And B queries with the hash, and the computational overhead isn't too bad for the one-off query
13:59
What's the actual use case?
Wes
Wes
is there a way in phpstorm to rename a method declaration with its overrides only, leaving method calls unchanged?
@Leigh Maybe a cryptographic bloom filter?

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