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14:00
@Rithesh So, you want to overlay one partially transparent image onto another image?
2 messages moved to recycle bin
@KendallFrey can we have any dll's for this to do
Yeah, there's probably something in .NET, or at the very least, Google can find one.
@KendallFrey hi
I'm glad I turned off the ping sound. sigh
14:09
Hi, I do not get the point of MD5 hashing
this website and many others can decrypt the md5 hash
MD5 is good hash for comparing file hashsums
so it is not for passwords?
No, it's not useful for string passwords
hashing algorithms are not for storing passwords
hashing algorithms are meant for checksums and integrity
14:11
Yes.
ffs
so what should I use for passwords?
@KendallFrey what do you mean?
The only reason that site can decrypt stuff is because someone has previously encrypted something, and its hash was stored in a database.
MD5 is not a good choice because the hash length is low enough to allow brute forcing on modern machines.
SHA256 is more secure.
14:13
you shoudl use a SLOW one-way
use bcrypt like a boss
Hashes are by definition one-way
password hashing should be slow
Only way to break them is by mass-guessing them
One other important thing: Use salts to prevent rainbow table attacks.
When I store a password, I generate a random salt the length of the hash, then append it to the password and hash.
Then I store both the salt and the password in the database.
When the user enters a password to log in, I repeat the procedure with the salt stored in the database, and if the hashes match, the passwords must too.
That's encryption, which is reversible, which is not a good thing.
BCRYPT MOTHERFUCKER
GOD
14:18
The rule of thumb is that you should never, ever make it possible to give the user his password back.
I don't think it was "hacked"
wtf a checksum isn't 'hackable'
like you cant decrypt it and get the original
How do you store your AES key?
@KendallFrey: i would argue against storing the hash as well
er
salt
You need the salt, otherwise you can't compare passwords.
> MD5 is not collision resistant
i do not get what u guys mean by salt, is it also like md5?
14:21
That's not quite the same as reversible.
well sure but i wouldnt store em beside the pasword
@AnkurSharma A salt is a random value added to a password before hashing, to 'mix up' the hash a bit.
i know what md5 is#
@OlegOrlov Where are you storing it?
If you store a decryption key anywhere on your server, you're vulnerable.
Attackers could get that key and use it to decrypt stuff.
your data is only as safe as your private key
thats a given
14:23
@OlegOrlov Where then?
So, when the user creates a new password, you give him the key?
@OlegOrlov o.o
You know, they create an account with a username and password.
Unless you manually assign every user a password?
How is the key stored? What if it's accidentally deleted?
OK
Whats the difference between hashing and encrypting?
Hashing is mathematically one way, encryption is built to go two ways
so md5 is not meant to be decoded since it is hash?
14:33
@AnkurSharma Correct.
There are more possible strings than there are possible hashes
So reversing correctly every time is impossible
Ok thanks
There are some sites that build databases for a small set of strings like the english dictionary.
As soon as you add a salt, all those sites are useless.
So certain hashes can be easily reversed, if they were the result of a common word.
> Use bcrypt or PBKDF2 exclusively to hash anything you need to be secure. These new hashes were specifically designed to be difficult to implement on GPUs. Do not use any other form of hash. Almost every other popular hashing scheme is vulnerable to brute forcing by arrays of commodity GPUs, which only get faster and more parallel and easier to program for every year.
jeff atwood ^
14:37
If you hash "password", you get 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99. Therefore, if you ever want to de-hash 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99, you can just remember that it is "password"
what if you hash your password using md5, and then hash the resultant hash again using sha1 or something like that? will that make it much harder to crack.
Not really.
The only difference is that the algorithm is slightly slower.
Which makes it harder to brute force.
the hash of 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99 is 696d29e0940a4957748fe3fc9efd22a3
I'm comparing to just a SHA1 hash.
If you compared it to a MD5 hash, it would be more secure.
So the 2-step MD5 is well-known as well
14:42
> An NVIDIA GeForce 8800 Ultra can calculate more than 200 million hashes per second
of md5
bcrypt and PBKDF2 have a 'cost' param to the algorithm that can make it arbitrarily slow
ok, i will look into "salt" then. Thanks
ie good for passwords
and resistant to known plaintext attacks due to the cost
I wonder if you could reconstitute a bunch of Mac Minis to mass-poll Google to build a database of decrypted hashes on the cheap.
Why compute them yourself, when you can use Google to pull them from other sites which have already done so?
That's just O(1).
probably be easier to crawl said sites
can you pull 200 million hashes per second from google?
with one GPU?
14:45
I suppose not.
But you can Google search for the decoded version of one given hash with one GPU, and stash that value in a local database to reduce the web hit for subsequent searches.
Why replicate effort, when everyone else is already doing so?
because effort can be less effort than asking others
btw this is why salting + storing the salt in the db is just an inconvenience for sha1/md5
200 million hashes per second with one GPU
I use SHA-2 BTW
14:49
password hashing should be slow and expensive
your user won't notice an extra 250ms to the request
Ones on fibre might
My question is, how does bcrypt increase the time per hash? Is it just like hashing multiple times?
litecoin, an interesting alternative to bitcoin, uses an algorithm called "scrypt" for hashing instead of sha2. It apparently requires a significant amount of memory to calculate a hash, which helps discourage people from making ASICs for mining.
15:17
I have a vaguely on topic question about hashing passwords:
Everyone makes a big deal about the site not knowing the password because it is a salted hash in the database. Doesn't this mean that the password has to be transmitted to the site in order to verify that you actually know the password?
The only other method I could think of is if the salt is transmitted to the client then the client could just transmit the hash back which could be verified, but then anyone who knows the hash could log in successfully
@MatthewSteeples Some very poorly-written sites send plaintext passwords over the internet.... Most, however, salt and encrypt the password in a uniform fashion on the client side, then just do a comparison against the encrypted string.
The client-side already knows the password, because the client typed it in. Why send that same password elsewhere before encrypting?
I suppose my argument is that if the server doesn't know the password then the function to turn the password into the hash needs to be done client side
@ShotgunNinja Because you should never trust the client.
The client then doesn't even need to hash it at all.
@KendallFrey I trust the client more than I trust the internet.
Do you trust SSL?
15:22
Do you know how easy it is to intercept an unencoded transmission?
@KendallFrey Do you have a good reason for me to not trust it?
No.
My point is, use SSL.
Take twitter for example: if you log in to twitter and capture the result using fiddler you will see that your password has been transmitted as is (granted over SSL)
Like I do.
15:24
@MatthewSteeples: yeah SSL is fine
My point is that the site is claiming not to know your password, but everytime you log in you are telling them it
Compared to, for example, public key certificate based authentication where you never reveal your secret
SSL is fine until you have a rogue certificate issued and a MITM attack
The point of the server not knowing the password is in not being able to give it to an attacker.
posted on May 10, 2013 by Eric Lippert

Today, another of my ongoing series of reruns of my fun-for-Friday non-computer posts. Here's one from the dot-com recovery of 2004. The economy must be picking up -- I'm getting cold calls from recruiters again for the first time in … Continue reading →

@MatthewSteeples: well sure but if someone has that kind of access to your machine, they could just as easily install a keylogger
I'm not talking about access to my machine, I'm talking about access to the other side
15:26
It may know the password while a user is logging in, the but it's important to forget it as soon as possible.
Most website implementations have the server process the password, but only store the (salted) hash in the DB, the plaintext password never leaves server ram
But it's impossible to guarantee the server's not storing the plaintext password.
True and true
As a server, never trust the client. As a client, never trust the server.
i enjoy storing plaintext passwords and credit card numbers on my server
@Steve it makes buying new hardware a lot easier doesn't it? ;)
i just store 'password' and match soley on the username
15:28
of course!
@drch TDWTF flashback
occaisionally i say 'incorrect password' and they type slower and think everything is fine
my new laptop comes today btw, i bought a used alienware off of ebay because i'm cheap
Anyway, I'm glad I asked that question because it just makes me believe even stronger in some form of certificate based authentication
@Steve What kind, how much?
15:29
but @MatthewSteeples is right. i think there will be a time very soon that even the laymen won't remember the days when we actually REMEMBERED and TYPED passwords
for everyone elses, theres lastpass
The only good bitcoin wallet sites use all-javascript encryption; your password/private keys should never leave your computer.
@KendallFrey m14x, i7 3630, 12 gigs ram, 650m video card, 950 bucks
Not bad.
There were some shady bitcoin sites a while back that did server processing, and logged the passwords on the side; and no one knew until their coins were stolen.
yeah, i bought a ssd off of newegg to throw in it too
really wanted something with two harddrive ports though, but oh well
15:33
Two internal harddrives in a laptop would be awesome. One for bootin' and apps, one for all the steam games I'll never play.
i think the m17x's have two bays, i really wanted to raid em together, but am too cheap
I don't bother messing around inside laptops.
A desktop, maybe. But if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
I have another question but this one may be off topic or disallowed (I had a look on the wiki and couldn't find any against it) so feel free to tell me to sod off. Is anyone looking for any contract work?
Not really.
If you will pay me to work in my spare time, sure.
@MatthewSteeples maybe
15:41
i have to work with the most ungodly woman for this project, she micromanages everything, she keeps complaining that the technical design document is too technical for her to read because she's a business person, i really want to tell her no fucking shit, thats because its not meant for you to read, its meant for developers to read
</endrant>
@MatthewSteeples: i assume you mean remotely and not in Bingley
If there are any WinDbg experts out there who can help me open a mini dump to view the heap pls PM me... thanks!
Basically I'm working as a sole developer for a startup, and there's too much work for just one person to do but not enough funds for 2 full time developers. We're looking for someone to work pretty much independently (@drch and yes remotely) on parts of the system so that development doesn't crawl to a standstill while I fix bugs and work on other features
@Steve Sounds like one of my projects. Every once in a while they get a girl here to do some UI changes in Expression Blend. She has no knowledge of XAML or WPF, so everything is laid out with absolute margins, but are still in Grids like they were originally. The result is more complex than WinForms layout.
@KendallFrey drives you crazy doesn't it.... ugh
15:44
I don't care anymore. I just use Margins too.
I've tried putting a brief outline on Elance (which I've used to do jobs as a developer before) but there's an awful lot of lowest common denominator programmers on there which look like they'll do the job for next to nothing. We'd rather pay someone and get it right than pay less and have to fix it ourselves!
it bugs the crap out of me, she wants me to put "why" on everything in the design document, like what is this table for.... and to any 14 year old programmer who has little experience its obvious
But I won't spam the channel anymore, if anyone is interested then feel free to start a chat with me
@MatthewSteeples contractors are more expensive than permie's, no?
i guess you can sever contractors more easily
Yes they are, I suppose what I meant was we don't have a reliable income stream. We have enough funds to probably take on a developer for 8-12 months currently, but I wouldn't feel right hiring someone under a permanent contract in that situation
I know it's bad business practice, but I don't really want to screw anyone over!
15:50
Hello
hi
Anybody here who is familiar with DirectShow?
i am not
I need some info about the CreateFilter method in directshow.net...
0
Q: How do I use the CreateFilter method in directshow.net?

JoshCan someone just show me an example of how this createfilter method in directshow should work? I see that a string is passed as a parameter but I don't understand what that string exactly is. I only understand the GUID part of it. Any help is appreciated. Thanks.

public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();

button1.Click += new EventHandler(button1_click);
button2.Click += new EventHandler(button2_click);

Graphics g = this.CreateGraphics();
Pen p = new Pen(Color.Red);
g.DrawLine(p, 10, 10, 50, 50);

g.Dispose();
p.Dispose();
}
The code doesnt work
It does not draw anything on the form.
15:54
You need to do that in OnPaint.
And call Paint() or Repaint() or something from the constructor?
Just guessing from all of the UI work I've had to do recently.
Also, you should use using instead of calling Dispose manually
^ That just sounds like overall good advice.
@KendallFrey and @ShotgunNinja Thanks, it works if i put it in the event for paint
@KendallFrey Am I using the using correctly
private void paint_event(object sender, PaintEventArgs e)
{
using(Graphics g = this.CreateGraphics())
{
Pen p = new Pen(Color.Red);
g.DrawLine(p, 10, 10, 50, 50);

g.Dispose();
p.Dispose();
}
}
Phone reminds me to go to the bank.
It's rainy today.
Sets phone to remind me again on Monday.
16:02
Anyone familiar with DirectShow.net?
@AnkurSharma You shouldn't call Dispose() inside a using block on the object you're disposing.
@AnkurSharma I think OnPaint is better, but what do I know.
That's the point of using blocks... they call Dispose() for you.
Oh, yeah, and put the Pen in the using block too.
Or just use Pens.Red or whatever it is.
how do i put two statements in the using () brackets
16:05
separate them with a comma
using(Graphics g = this.CreateGraphics())
using(Pen p = new Pen(Color.Red))
{
    g.DrawLine(p, 10, 10, 50, 50);
}
If you put them on following lines you only need one indent and one set of {}
@KendallFrey did NOT know that
As @drch just demonstrated!
Yep, that's also common
16:07
@KendallFrey Cannot use more than one type in a for, using, fixed, or declaration statement
This is the error I get when using comma
@AnkurSharma Yeah? Show me your code.
        using(Graphics g = this.CreateGraphics(), Pen p = new Pen(Color.Red))
        {
            g.DrawLine(p, 10, 10, 50, 50);
        }
Guess it's simplest to do what drch said
yupp, drchs way works fine
This guys makes it work without putting his stuff in the Paint EventHandler.
nvm, he is putting it in the clickhandler, thats why it works. i guess.
is there any redraw() or render() method for redrawing without putting code in event handler
when you multithread, how does that work in the memory/assembly? does a stack frame get pushed onto a new stack?
16:23
New stack I'm pretty sure.
yeah it has to create all new segments
i am about to die
objective C is HORRIBLE
1) Switch methods do not use strings...only int's
2) Connecting to FTP is almost impossible
3) It is not C#
lmfao
4) writting an XML file is impossible
5) Parsing an xml is a little difficult
6) again, it is not C#
@KendallFrey Did i miss anything?
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();

using (Graphics g = this.CreateGraphics())
using (Pen p = new Pen(Color.Red))
{
g.DrawLine(p, 10, 10, 50, 50);
this.Invalidate();
this.Refresh();
this.OnPaint(new PaintEventArgs(g, new Rectangle()));
this.InvokePaint(this, new PaintEventArgs(g, new Rectangle()));
}
}
How the hell do i make this work
16:32
hm
wpf?
or win forms
winforms
er are you meant to be calling onpaint directly?
if i draw the line in paint_eventhandler, it works
do that then
but if i do it in the constructor, it does not
16:34
why do you not want it in there?
my guess, is that you need to redraw the form
This is why I use WPF.
Forever free from drawing code.
Repaint, invalidate, invokePaint, onpaint. nothing works
on paint? the event handler?
yea, OnPaint(), as shown in the code above
16:37
so, what are you trying to do?
so, what are you trying to do?
draw a border?
i know
AK1
AK1
need help
o rly?
The answer is "bananas"
i love C#
nothing will ever separate us
16:38
@EliteGamer , I just want to learn how to do it because I will definitely need to redraw manually when I create something useful in C#
If you create something useful, use WPF.
WPF, yes eventually
I used to do winforms....but i saw WPF
it is scary at first
but it gets easier
Much like sex.
16:39
ha ha ha :)
The only difference is, I've used WPF.
well, i have to go work on this mac software
:O u know how sex feels?
i hate macs
SEX, WHAT IS THIS THING YOU CALL SEX?
16:40
OMG
NO ONE KNOWS
@Steve When a mummy and daddy love each other very much...
ha ha
i need to leave before i have a heart attack
OMG HE PUTS HIS PEEPEE IN HER PEEPEE!
lol, i have some stories, but nsfw
HA HA HA
@KendallFrey that is funny
16:41
And then he smiles and takes it out. And then they go to sleep.
AK1
AK1
I am trying to create a simple ilist....but it is howing an error....Operator '==' cannot be applied to operands of type 'string' and 'int' IList<CliClient> clientDelete = new List<CliClient>();
clientDelete = clientData.FirstOrDefault(c => c.ClientID == id);
@AK1 You can't compare ints and strings.
use data.equals(otherdata);
just trying to be a pro
but failed
AK1
AK1
16:42
so what can i use
to solve the error
You should be comparing strings and strings or ints and ints.
Convert.ToString(Int); or Convert.ToInt(string)
AK1
AK1
i am trying to convert it tolist....
but it is not accepting that
if ("one" == 1)
16:43
What you're trying to do is compare c.ClientID with id. That doesn't work.
AK1
AK1
yes
so how to work it out
I notice you do clientDelete = new List<CliClient>() You shouldn't do that because you never use the list anyway.
@AK1 Convert one or the other so that you can compare them.
Why are you comparing strings and ints anyway?
You seem to have a design problem.
AK1
AK1
i am only compating string
One of them is an int.
I think it's id.
AK1
AK1
id is of string type
16:46
And what is c.ClientID?
AK1
AK1
client ID is also of string type @KendallFrey
I'm sorry, but I don't believe you.
IList<CliClient> clientDelete = new List<CliClient>();
clientDelete = clientData.FirstOrDefault(c => Convert.ToInt(c.ClientID) == Convert.ToInt(id));
use this maybe
O GOD NO
AK1
AK1
when i change the code to : clientDelete = clientData.FirstOrDefault(c => c.ClientID == id.ToString());
16:47
Convert is a horrible class
omg i am a forever failer
AK1
AK1
it shows another error
@AnkurSharma Only because you use Convert
@AK1 I bet I know what, too
convert is wonderful
IList<CliClient> should be IEnumerable<CliClient>
@drch Do you like VB?
16:48
nope
AK1
AK1
An explicit conversion exists (are you missing a cast?)
Then why do you like Convert?
Convert comes from VB.
it can be handy at times
AK1
AK1
sorry guys but it is not helping me
ak1
16:50
What isn't?
id is a string, right?
and ClientID is an int?
AK1
AK1
yes
No, he thinks it is, but it's not.
AK1
AK1
they both are string type
y not use cast (int)ClientID and (int)id
16:50
I can't believe that.
@AnkurSharma Still horrible.
You can't cast a string to an int.
I don't think...
then you wouldnt get that "cant apply operator == to int and string"
What drch said.
you can't cast a string to an int?
also
Your error message is showing us you're wrong.
16:51
you cant assign IEnumerable to IList
you can parse itttt
2 mins ago, by Kendall Frey
IList<CliClient> should be IEnumerable<CliClient>
@Steve Smart man.
if you cant solve COMPILE issues...
You shouldn't be a programmer?
16:52
What I learnt today - it is difficult to impress Kendall
@KendallFrey id say then you arent one
@AnkurSharma Smart man.
keyboard + compiler does not a programmer make
@drch u very good english speak
A programmer is merely a problem solver who knows a programming lanaguage.
wth
You should ask @rlemon for some of his porn.
Nice racks, they are.
16:55
.
$('.')
ahh.push(it);
ipconfig /flushdns
^ windows networking porn
function sex() { var a = []; while (true) { a.push(); a.pop(); } }
try { hooker(); } catch( std )  { return false; } // I cured AIDS

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