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00:44
Now that was a waste of time
They all claim that their recognition-technology is based on their hardware
In other words, they want to sell hardware, and not licenses/APIs
What to do, what to do/
?
@KristopherIves ^^^
?
Too spendy?
They don't want to give it as a service/license
They want to sell hardware
brainjs like I mentioned :)
I suppose they understand the algorithm is relatively trivial, and they can't justify over-pricing it, so they force you to buy expensive hardware and now they get a win-win
Its the data that is important here, the algorithm is going to be limited heavily by finite resources
00:58
What data is important?
The images you train it with
I guess I better look for products that are based on "3D object recognition" and see how well they work with vehicles?
It's all going to be the same :)
What do you mean by the same? You think they'll try to sell hardware?
The neural network isn't doing anything magical, and there aren't many different ways to use it other than configuring more or less resources and changing how you feed the data into it
I'm saying that anything that is based on the ANN algorithm is going to exhibit the same "3D recognition"
If you have test images I can throw together a demo for you
01:02
Well you've mentioned that the training process of the ANN is overwhelming, I need a solution that can achieve the training process easily
Can't you use any car model you find on google as a sample for a demo?
Its not overwhelming it's just the primary component in making an ANN solution
Well a demo is something I would do for free, and I'm not interested in assembling a large amount of images from Google with different angles and mapped to their make and models. I don't think you understand the scale of data you're going to need here.
Easily thousands of images to get started.
But even if you buy the hardware or get a service you're going to need a shit ton of images.
Let's clarify something
Let's take a specific model: Toyota Corolla 2015
How many image-samples do you think is required for 'learning' it?
I would imagine to even begin getting meaningful results you would need 10 from each angle
Like I said your data is also the most important
Do you crop backgrounds out of the data?
Have you done edge-analysis yourself or automated? Have you post-processed your data images, etc.
One of the companies I've contacted, showed me a 'demo' of the learning process
The less work you do on your data the more you're going to need
How did their demo work?
01:15
For a 'frontal' recognition you require 3 samples- 3 photos of the model.
You give it a "left" angle, a "right" angle, and a frontal
Right, for each model of car, etc.
And now it can recognize your model within this range, all the angles from the one you provided, to the 'center'
3 is a pretty lowball estimate, you're going to need more to get results you can trust
Hmm
I've been referred to a freelancer from China
I'm looking at his/their somesort of a portfolio... and I see license-plate-recognition
And I'm like... Okay... that's relatively easy...
And then... face recognition?!
 
9 hours later…
10:02
helloc all;
 
4 hours later…
13:58
Morning @deckard
@DrorK. afternoon here :)
Morning is a state of mind :)
hahaha
definitely not then
user3079266
14:17
helloc all;
helloc @Mints97; // Welcome back!
user3079266
thanks, @deckard =)
user3079266
'sup? did you finish clearing up that code you had?
sort of
I changed quite a bit
I put the declarations in variable.h instead of the main library
I think is cleaner now
user3079266
well, putting declarations in a separate header file is common practice
14:24
yes
otherwise, variable.c felt kind of strange
now you only have to include the .h
user3079266
splitting code into separate .c files instead of one .c file and several .h files isn't just a matter of taste, really. It also enables one to use something as cool as encapsulation
Hey, would anyone happen to have a good library for OneWire, i am using 8051 and SDCC. Can not get the damn Search Rom command to work
14:50
@Mints97 I'm trying now to do encapsulation
Not very successfully by now XD
user3079266
that's simple. Define all functions that you do not want accessed by everyone inside a separate .c file, and define them as static
user3079266
this restricts calls to them to the .c file where they are defined
regarding struct encapsulation
but I find quite annoying that you cannot access directly to the members of the struct
user3079266
oh, struct member encapsulation is not something easily done
I think I will leave the struct visible
user3079266
15:02
an alternative is to encapsulate the entire struct and use opaque pointers in conjunction with getter and setter functions
helloc all;
helloc @karim;
user3079266
helloc @karim;
can i have your opinion on this little project : codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/78671/…
you should put guards on that .h file
15:14
yes thanks, i will
also, in the example, I find it is a good practice to put first the include of your own libraries rather that the system's ones
@karim You should use a temporary pointer with realloc()
Oh
My bad, you do!
@DrorK. yes :)
in this case it is the same, but it is useful just in case you missed to include some library on your own library
it's just a minor thing, but can prevent your future self from headaches :)
user3079266
@DrorK. "should" is not really always correct. You see, when you've eaten up so much memory that allocation or reallocation fails, it's better to simply exit, gracefully or not...
user3079266
15:19
that's just IMHO
How is it better?
user3079266
well, often the only other option is trying to clear up the heap, failing miserably and then still exiting
@Mints97 that will not happen, only if the user intentionally want to do it, what is the maximum line size that you will find in a ini file? 512 characters, that will not cause realloc to fail.
I don't think that the question is whether it will or won't
I think that the question is what to do in the case it will
I can't find any reason not to handle this event gracefully, it's relatively easy to do so
user3079266
@karim I'm not talking about your case specifically, I'm talking about a temporary variable on realloc being a requirement or not in general =)
user3079266
15:23
@DrorK. maybe, but if you're going to crash anyway, I think it's better to keep the code a bit more concise
@Mints97 ah ok.
@karim I don't find any of the comments you've received to be useful
The only thing that might be a readability-concern would be to put the 'sizeof char' as a comment
@DrorK. sizeof char? you mean sizeof *str
@DrorK. cause a char is always 1 byte?
Yes, a char is always 1 unit
ok,thanks. i will
15:29
And it might be easier to handle your dynamic allocationing externally, but then again it doesn't make much of a difference
And please, by all means, ignore the guy who claimed that the 'goto' is hard to follow
If it's hard for him to follow a goto, within the most natural context: a cleanup
Then there is no valid case where 'goto' would be justified by him.
free brb;
@DrorK. yea that what i told to my self, goto is the best way to cleanup.
free @deckard
@deckard Why are you free'ing brb? :)
16:01
hahahaha
shit
sry
goto brb;
dammit
poor brb
16:48
i'm having a segfault in a free() call
I have check the pointer address and it is the same as it was when it was malloc'd
any ideas?
user3079266
17:01
@deckard yep, you're overwriting its metadata with an out-of-bounds heap array access elsewhere
the metadata is located just before that memory address right?
user3079266
depends on the compiler, though I wager it'd be a sensible place to put it
user3079266
but that doesn't really matter, because the offending array might end up anywhere on the heap
user3079266
you won't determine what array it was just by knowing where in the heap it was... that is, without a good debugger
Is there any way to check it without having to look at the memory dump?
and even then, if the metadata is not located just before that address it wont be possible to do it that way
user3079266
17:07
erm, yes. Go through all your array accesses carefully =)
:(
this isnt going to be fun xD
user3079266
@deckard not really. Just go through the process with a debugger. It'll shout out and stop execution on the segfault, and you'll be able to take a look at whatever's going on with the code
user3079266
in disassembled state, of course
helloc all;
anyone good in xss attacks here?
user3079266
@haris oh, me, me! =3
user3079266
17:14
and yeah
user3079266
helloc @haris;
want a site that has a live vulnerability to play with?
:p
helloc @haris;
helloc @deckard;
show :)
user3079266
17:16
@haris would be fun. Enemies, or is it a greyhat job? =)
hahahaha no way
user3079266
the input?
i have already mailed them informing them abt the vulnerability
quite ironic to say the least
17:18
yup
user3079266
so where is the vuln? the input field?
yup
try this
i dnt knw if its a persistent one or not
user3079266
I can't seem to get < or > past it, can you give me your example?
user3079266
duh, it won't even let through quotes... are you sure it's a vuln?
:_ such a pain to develop in win
user3079266
17:23
@deckard oh, you're on Windows! What compiler?
copy paste the script i gave..
user3079266
@haris what script?
<script>alert("xss");</script>.co
user3079266
O_o I was looking in the wrong direction all that time
user3079266
it's right in this page
user3079266
17:26
...on second thoughts, its security implications are pretty close to zero...
gcc
im using c::b
thats wat i was wondering.. it wud have a prob if it was a persistent one.. not sure though
user3079266
@haris if by persistent you mean stored/active, no. It probably won't even do as a proper passive XSS
@Mints97 ya.. i meant that only.. i was looking thru the internet on how to differentiaite between the 2
user3079266
ah, yes, it's exploitable, but in a terribly clunky way. You host a webpage that takes this page as an IFrame, then sets the input field value to a payload when the IFrame loads. Bam-you got the cookies of whoever visited the page
user3079266
17:31
oh, yeah, the cookies. If the important stuff is properly protected (and I think it should be), this is also worth nothing.
@Mints97, ook.. i thought this could be used for defacing..
gdb on c::b doesnt catch the segfault
um
user3079266
aha, http-only on the session cookie. No cookie-stealing without Java enabled... and without a user stupid enough to click "allow" on all of its security popups. Vulnerability present? yes. Impact on security? I'd say about 0.00001% danger =)
user3079266
@deckard you mean you can't reproduce the bug?
user3079266
@haris defacing? XSS? Dude, it's 2015! XSS is almost dead as a serious vulnerability!
17:35
if i run the program I get the awesome 0xC0000005 return
but running the debugger it finishes with status 0
@Mints97, i dnt really follow the security news nd updates.. :p
user3079266
try a different debugger. My personal favorites are OllyDBG and ImmunityDebugger
user3079266
@haris well, this isn't much on part of news, really. It's just that the attack has lived itself out, so to speak
@Mints97, hmm
i will check those
user3079266
17:40
you see, these days, you don't even really have to filter user input for XSS. If all you care about is cookies, you can just protect them with HttpOnly. However, stored XSSes and some passive XSSes can be still used to stuff browser exploits onto a credible website (or, in the latter case, make the user think they're going to a safe and credible website). However, this attack can be performed successfully only by real blackhats
user3079266
the reason is simple. No one else has both the money needed to buy good exploit packs, good knowledge of the market where they're sold, and enough technical knowledge to actually use them in an XSS
ollydbg catches sth, at least there is some red things here and there
user3079266
BTW, this specific vulnerability on AVG's website is worthless in this aspect, because its social engineering exploitability equals zero
but I think its enough for today
@Mints97, yup, it seemed worthless in the beginning only.. but as always.. it was gud to spread the word.. :D
user3079266
17:44
@deckard next thing to do would be to think of a sequence of bytes that'd be in the array you're freeing, then do a search for it in the dump and take a close look at what's nearby
@Mints97 classic deadbeef
=D
user3079266
@haris oh, yes, definitely, that'll give you a good record with AVG. If you'll ever apply for a job and have a not-very-infosec-savvy interviewer, that'll make a great story
user3079266
especially if AVG will confirm that
user3079266
@deckard ah, so it's a string? should make things easier =)
nope
thats hex :3
user3079266
17:47
Olly's got the memory dump on the lower left part of the window, just rightclick it - there is a search option in the menu
easy-to-spot hex code
bye guys..
free haris; // bye!
user3079266
free @haris;
I think i'm going too
ill continue tomorrow
thank you very much @Mints97 !
user3079266
17:53
@deckard you're welcome =)
user3079266
free @deckard;
i hope tomorrow evening i can have it fixed
goto away; // bye!
 
2 hours later…
user559633
20:14
i can't seem to figure out how to atof the string response of a function
user559633
i'm trying to do current_version = atof(*gnu_get_libc_version());
@tristan what is the problem?
why using dereferencing pointer in atof parameter, gnu_get_lib_version should return a float number.
@tristan and why will you want to convert a version number into a float?
20:28
@tristan atof() converts string to float. gnu_get_libc_version() returns pointer to "string". What's the problem with that? You should not dereference an output of gnu_get_libc_version(), that's it.
so, current_version = atof(gnu_get_libc_version()); isn't it?
user559633
@karim gnu_get_libc_version returns a string. @Kamiccolo will try that now
From the manual (man gnu_get_libc_version()):
       #include <gnu/libc-version.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <stdio.h>

       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           printf("GNU libc version: %s\n", gnu_get_libc_version());
           printf("GNU libc release: %s\n", gnu_get_libc_release());
           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }
pretty straightforward, huh?
btw, Your compiler should have complained.
user559633
When I set -Wall (gcc) implicit declaration of function ‘atof’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
user559633
i'll post my code
user559633
sorry for the newbie questions. i'm coming over from the python world where the computer chews our food for us
user559633
user559633
20:47
@Kamiccolo and @karim thanks for getting me on the right track/giving me the answer. figured it out :)
@tristan #include <stdlib.h>
user559633
yep :D
@tristan what a comparison... xD
@tristan tristan if you just starting with c, i think that you should start with a book, to understand how it work.
@tristan not like python when you learn by parctice
user559633
@Kamiccolo did i do something wrong or just that it's simple
user559633
20:51
@karim will do. is something like K&R C Programming language a good intro or is there a canonical suggestion?
@tristan well, if you have some experience with programming, i think you can start with K&
user559633
Thanks. I like to think I'm upper-intermediate to advanced with Python, but as soon as I step into C or C++, I kind of have no idea what functions do or how to self-service to debug
@tristan just normal :), c is more low-level that other language like python or java, so you will deal more with memory management, buffer ect..
user559633
yeah, that's really the experience that i'm looking for and why i'm hunting for tasks at my job that i can write in C -- i feel like there's a lot of cases in which i only have a surface understanding of how something works
@tristan can you ask a personal question?
user559633
21:00
go for it
you haven't learned c in university?
user559633
The school I attended used Java as a teaching language instead of C.
@tristan ah ok, cause in our country any university use c as teaching language :)
user559633
Yeah, I wish that was the case in America too. I'm thinking about going back to school to see what other important things I missed out on.
@tristan ok good luck for learning c.
free all;
user559633
21:06
Cheers, thanks
@tristan ewww... sounds like pretty traumatizing environment to study... :(
user559633
:) college as a preparation to work in an office
but yeah, leap (actually, an experiment) of some schools and universities in U.S. to switch to Python was pretty good. At least on my oppinion.
user559633
Yeah, I think Python is a good teaching language, but then again I'm really biased.
@tristan yeaaaaah... Java and corporate banking/insurance/etc crap.
user559633
21:12
I'm thinking of going back to get a masters in comp sci and one of the determining factors in where I go will be the language used. It seems like most great schools are still using C for upper level courses.
user559633
Anyway, I'm off. It was nice chatting with you @Kamiccolo
@tristan I wish they also have added some stuff from waaay more lower layer. Like Assembly, C. Full picture would be even better.
see You later, right? :}
free @tristan;
user559633
Definitely. I'll be back soon. free all;
22:52
~_~
hello
_
23:16
oy :}
stuck on linuxCon@AU 2015 videos... :}
@Kamiccolo gotta link?
@AaronHall sure, here You go:
:}
CCC videos are fun too :D
@KristopherIves definitely! Sadly, finished most of those already...
also there are plenty of smaller conferences dealing with hacking/opensource/etc. which, sadly, IF provides, only pour quality video material...
audio only at some cases would be enough though...
interesting fact, in Community Summit most of the participants are females :}
aye, also migrating some stuff from SVN to Git in the background...
23:36
@Kamiccolo thanks
@AaronHall have fun with that ^_^ tech jokes gets quite good at some points.
@KristopherIves Morning... recurring monthly cost for processing 1 video feed: $300
What do you say?
@DrorK. damn, it's almost 2AM here xD
It's almost 2AM here too

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