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16:00
@ScottPack I'm not sure he raped her
not in the version I watched anyway
@deed02392 wat
Not in the movie, no. In the version of the story I read she woke up pregnant.
wtf?!
@ScottPack What the fuck.
surely that's not a disney take of it
16:01
@Simon Those old stories were morality fear tactic stories to keep people in line.
@ScottPack Don't get raped?
@Simon In the book of collected Grimm stories I have the Huntsman was instructed to get the heart and liver of Snow White. So when he slaughtered an animal to bring back parts claiming they were hers. The mom then cooked them up for dinner.
Yummy.
oh you mean like the Bible @ScottPack
@ScottPack OM NOM NOM.
@deed02392 Pretty much. That there is a pretty graphic story full of misdeeds and bad advice.
16:07
heh
If I offered to sell my wife for a shoe I would be in big trouble.
Or stoning her for wearing pants?
that is specific
Yeah, bad advice.
@ScottPack Seems like a clever thing to do to to me.
@AviD I'm thinking חליצה‎. Is that right?
16:11
Hieroglyphs.
@ScottPack Exchanging a spouse for a shoe seems more likely the other way round. Since when are men interested in shoes?
@ScottPack RTL is evil
sexism right there @CodesInChaos
@CodesInChaos Well, yes. What I'm remembering is more along the lines of paying the fine of a shoe in order to not marry your brother's widow.
@deed02392 Big time, us men have the right to be into shoes too.
ikr @Simon
16:13
bored
BORED
BoReD
b0r3d
nurd
.oO( zzzzz )
@Simon spread that love around like a fatal disease
"You can borrow my Rolling Stones t-shirt"
Very deep lyrics.
-.-
@kalina it is very boring hearing how bored you are
16:14
my boredom is infectious
United Kingdom has a point.
before too long you'll all be so bored that you won't be able to continue with life
@kalina Won't happen, was too awesome for that.
nothing about you is awesome
Keep thinking that.
16:15
i'm not bored, i'm busy
@Simon no, that would mean I'm spending time thinking about you, and you're just not worth that kind of attention
@kalina Alright. Anyway, you're right, I don't do drugs so I'm not awesome at all.
is that what she said @Simon?
@deed02392 Nah ^_^
did you listen to abgt050?
16:17
I was just adding @Thomas on LinkedIn. It felt weird choosing "Friend" as the reason for the connection.
At least not that I know of.
@deed02392 wot
so good! a&b have put all the sets up on mixcloud
above and beyond group therapy 050
etc
oh you're not very trancey so you might not like all of it
I do drugs all the time. I'm particularly partial to 1,3,7-Trimethyl-1H-purine-2,6(3H,7H)-dione.
@deed02392 Yeah, it's a bit slow for me.
@ScottPack Ok ok, nurd, what is it?
I'm addicted to dihydrogen oxide
16:19
@Simon Caffeine
@DavidFreitag Thank you.
@deed02392 Dihydrogen Monoxide is a killer, man!
@ScottPack For the first part of your sentence: Was your profile hacked by @Kalina?
@DavidFreitag :D
16:20
@ScottPack Asshole.
but I just can't get enough of it
lmgtfy is the most obnoxious thing on the internet
@deed02392 Just don't OD, that gets nasty right quick.
@deed02392 But it's simply amazing!
@deed02392 Yeah?
@DavidFreitag yeah sometimes I've consumed so much of it I can actually see it leaving in my breath
Especially when you have a chrome extension that automagically generates you links for lmgtfy.
16:21
@RoryA @AviD Since the three of us have Security.SE on our LinkedIn, is it possible to create some sort of a "page" so people can click on it from the LinkedIn profile?
@deed02392 Woah, better watch out, that stuf'll get ya.
Google, sometimes i don't understand you. I have to pay to have extensions up on the market, and i can only have a maximum of 10. Doesn't that seem counterintuitive?
odd @DavidFreitag
maybe you need to generate a number of sales before the limit is removed
Perhaps.
@Adnan I'm surprised I don't have it on mine. It's on my resume.
Hehe, i love typos in code. private void CalibartionLoad()
I love them so much i want to torture the author to death.
16:25
@DavidFreitag Yeah, it should be String and return "Simon rocks";
@ScottPack Well, go add it then.
@Simon public string toSimon() { return "Simon rocks!"; }
I need to do a big cleanup on my profile.
@DavidFreitag That's way better.
@AviD @RoryA @Scott Apparently, we cannot create a page on LinkedIn for Sec.SE. I'll see if "groups" can be listed under experience. If yes, I'll create a group.
Actually, I'm only doing this so we can have a link to Sec.SE and the logo.
16:27
@Simon Put a little easter egg in for anyone doing some dll injection
@DavidFreitag Rofl, did you really?
I think groups only exist within the groups category.
@Simon No, but i thought about it a few times
@DavidFreitag Hehe.
16:30
old
@deed02392 I would click that, but i don't want my computer to get herpes.
3
HUMOUR KNOWS NO EXPIRATION DATE
@deed02392 After five reposts anything can become less funny.
whatever first time i've seen it, god
16:31
zomg guys! Check this out. facebook.com/…
sue me for trying to share some lulz
@deed02392 =]
@ScottPack LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
@kalina A/S/L?
@Simon die
16:33
That is still funny, however.
@kalina No idea what D/I/E stands for.
But to avoid future confusions that it could cause, I suggest that you type it exactly like I did.
It's German for The. As in "The Bart. The."
@Simon you're still confused, I said die, not d/i/e
@kalina You're the one trying to reason with @Simon...
@kalina I think you are confused because you just said the same thing twice again.
16:35
I'm not reasoning, I'm making a statement and then tabbing back to something else
Good morning, Internets.
allo
@tylerl it's not morning
@kalina ta gueule
itr's dark already @tylerl
it's past noon @tylerl
@tylerl UGT is irrelevant when the sun has already gone down.
@tylerl - actually, I like UGT. Hadn't seen it before - but it needs adding to the meta memes post on Canonical Time :-)
@kalina Making it very nearly morning.
16:39
I completely missed the AM today
well, apart from those several hours before I went to sleep
I should clean up from lunch.
Brag about it.
I distinctly remember you being around well into the AM
PATRICK
16:44
@ThomasPornin Someone, in this case, is wrong. Analyzing traffic at an exit point can potentially compromise Alice (the user) utilizing Tor to access Service C (in the clear web). Alice, who's trying to access Service H (hidden) doesn't need to know about the IP (introduction point) used to introduce Service H in the first place. IPs can be used to compromise Service H, but they can't compromise Alice. Totally different topics.
Ah! It's so difficult to write extended messages. Every time you correct a typo, the other person is pinged again. It's very annoying.
@Adnan I mean that NSA-like people could target introduction points for service H (they are known) and usual entry points to make correlations and thus determine who accesses H.
ugh, the ladies in my office have the heat cranked up to 78F. I'm dying in here
@DavidFreitag IT'S GETTING HOT IN HERE SO TAKE OFF ALL YOUR CLOTHES
@LucasKauffman Meanwhile in America...
IT'S GETTING HOT IN HERE I WILL TAKE MY CLOTHES OFF
@DavidFreitag Pretty sure an American rapper sings this.
Isn't it Nelly?
16:50
@ThomasPornin Sorry, still wrong. The introduction point can only be used to potentially lead to the actual address of Service H. It cannot be used to compromise people accessing Service H. (Of course, let's put aside cases where Service H is compromised and an exploit is planted in it which is executed in the visitor's browsers leading to the visitor's compromise).
@Adnan You're so Canadian.
You'd fit well here.
Let me pretend i know what an "American wrapper" is.
@DavidFreitag wot
@Simon 'xactly
@kalina gave you some crack or what?
16:52
@Thomas Wait wait, I think there's a misunderstanding here on my part. All the time I'm assuming you're talking about the initial introduction point. You're correct, a service's introduction points can indeed be used to compromise its visitors.
@Adnan Let there be light.
@Simon I'm on that Dihydrogen Monoxide stuff maaan.
@DavidFreitag You crazy.
@Simon Have you seen my gravatar?
@DavidFreitag Yes I have, it's awesome.
16:56
@ThomasPornin BUT (a big one), those introduction points reside in the Tor network itself. Unlike exit nodes (which are on the edge) they're way more difficult to get your hands on. I think you're as likely to find Service H's real address as to find the introduction point's real address.
While with exit nodes, you can easily find them (well, by definition).
@Adnan I would say that the biggest issue is that each hidden service has its own introduction points, so this monitoring does not scale up easily; you end up monitoring (or simply running) a lot of nodes.
In the scenario I envision, the spy agency is not interested in the real address of the service, but in the real addresses of the people who access the service.
Bah. There are only 4000-or-so relay nodes in Tor. Any decent information agency should have no trouble unravelling the whole thing.
If they are even half competent at the job, at least 1500 of these nodes are directly NSA-operated.
I mean, it seems so easy.
They could even "leak" some pseudo-slides claiming that Tor is a hard target in order to get people to use Tor. That's what I would do if I were the NSA.
@ThomasPornin they do have the capacity to do it
17:18
Oh wow
I had thought that by default if you use Tor you become a relay node
4,000 relays is nothing
@DavidFreitag No code misspelling is more epic than HTTP-REFERER, irreversibly carved in the single most popular protocol on the Internet.
2
Ha! that truly is epic @tylerl
@tylerl Nice
> Roy Fielding has remarked that neither "referrer" nor the misspelling "referer" were recognized by the standard Unix spell checker of the period.
fail
sure, blame it on the tools
17:23
I wonder if google was around back then... It's not like he would have been able to google it, and short of getting a dictionary out... I don't blame him.
Then again the tool you are probably referring to isn't nearly as old as i think it is..
@deed02392 This would be detrimental to anonymity, since relay nodes are supposed to be selected at random by other users -- which implies that they are known. Also, it would be hard for users who are behind a NAT (i.e. most people with a home router nowadays).
@DavidFreitag It could be argued that the HTTP specification necessarily pre-dates Google, given that Google is an HTTP-based service.
@DavidFreitag Google is from 1998. Before that, people used other search engines, e.g. Altavista.
@Xander That's what i was thinking as i typed that message.
Some dude's name that I went to school with was Cimon and, of course, was pronounced Simon. Talk about a misspell.
17:26
@ThomasPornin Yeah, but from what i have heard they weren't nearly as good as Google.
still @ThomasPornin, it's pretty concerning that the ratio of relays to users is so low
@Simon The parents of that poor soul should be tarred and feathered.
@DavidFreitag I agree.
@DavidFreitag Circa 1995 they were rather good; they had indexed the complete Internet; it would use the overwhelming size of 40 gigabytes.
@Simon Then they should be disciplined for naming their child "Cimon"
@ThomasPornin Woah.
17:27
@ThomasPornin Remember the good old days of gopher directories?
@DavidFreitag It seems that the thing of the parents of our generation and the last is to give an "original" name to their kid or spell it "originally".
@ScottPack Actually have an "Internet address book" somewhere around here from the early 1990s
actual book
@ThomasPornin The complete Internet, or the complete World Wide Web?
However Altavista failed to scale up with the Internet, the way Google did. One must say that Altavista was not a stand-alone commercial venture; it was funded by DEC (Digital) to demonstrate how DEC machine totally ruled.
@ThomasPornin I completed my DEC in May.
17:29
@Simon Yeah I agree. They should stop because their "original names" and "original spellings" are just fucking stupid.
@DavidFreitag Exactly!
@Xander Mmh, I think that at one time they had a FTP search engine as well. But it fell into disuse.
@ThomasPornin And by comparison, Google was run on this:
@tylerl I used to have one of those too. One of the few books I've actually gotten rid of as completely useless.
@tylerl 20k USD of computing power right there.
17:30
If you look closely, you'll notice those are SCSI disks. Spared no expense, they did
@tylerl Well, DEC ran into its own troubles. Awesome machines, but really expensive. The commercial strategy was braindead.
@tylerl Those displays are black and white. noobs.
The Alpha platform is also rather toasty.
@ThomasPornin No, it was quite easy to complete.
@ScottPack I must say that even two decades later, the accumulated time has failed to veil my memories enough to make me think of these "old days" as "good".
@ScottPack From 1999 to 2001 I had an Alpha as main desktop machine.
Pretty slick. PC owners were boasting about 200 MHz CPU, I had 500 MHz (and 64-bit registers).
Hey @ScottPack, in 1999 I was 8.
17:33
@ThomasPornin Perhaps my use of the word "good" was not sufficiently sarcasic.
me too @Simon
high five
Internet five.
same birth-year friends
i feel so close to you right now
91 was one hell of a year.
@ThomasPornin Understood. From 1985 until 1994 my primary desktop system was an Amiga 1000. I may have only had a 7Mhz processor but I loved my 3d graphics, multitasking, and dedicated video/audio chips.
17:34
mmhmm
@Simon No. 1990 was much better for Chinon and Côtes de Beaune.
goes to Wiki
Oh, wine.
Silly me.
it was French @Simon, there was a 99.999% chance it was about wine
LOL, I instinctively capitalised Wine at first, I'm such a nerd
@deed02392 Hey, don't be so prejudiced. It could also have been cheese.
@deed02392 Yeah, it was silly of me to not think about it.
@ThomasPornin Are baguettes still a thing?
17:36
isn't Côtes de Beaune French for we surrender?
@deed02392 I can confirm that it does mean that.
@Simon Of course. It's bread.
lol @Simon
right I'm off home
can someone please remember my new desk extension number is 5246
bai
kthxbai
17:39
@deed02392 Hey, your new desk extension number is 5386
it's easy cos 5 is my favourite number and 2, 4, 6, well they're the first three even numbers int they
@deed02392 the Internet will never forget
@DavidFreitag lol dammit
pussy's backup with archive tape
real men backup by putting their shiz online
who wants a torrent for the contents of my C: drive
@deed02392 you couldn't pay me to look at that
^
Unless it's a ton of money.
17:40
@deed02392 the FBI
Alright, 10$.
@deed02392 Sure, got any tax info on there? Or credit card datas?
So I'm eating beef stew with a fork. It's not quite working out.
I dunno. Fork and bread should be more than sufficient.
If not you're talking about soup.
SOUP
It's on the brothy side.
But it's more meat potatoes and carrots than broth
17:43
@deed02392 It is the code for the RFC on TLS 1.2
@ScottPack Did you find your Halloween costume yet?
@Simon Yeah, he just has to skin you to get it
@DavidFreitag Hey, it's my own costume.
@Simon It puts the lotion on else it gets the hose again
17:50
That's a creepy movie.
@ScottPack Not nearly as creepy as A Clockwork Orange.
@DavidFreitag That movie is indeed quite something.
@DavidFreitag I'm confused by that movie.
@Simon I remember the first time i saw it. I was like "What the hell did i just watch"
Then i saw it a few more times, and i find myself wondering the exact same thine each time.
It came out in 1971, quite amazing.
Its weirdness made it survive through a few decades.
17:57
@DavidFreitag My cousin is dressing up as Alex from that movie for halloween.
creepiest costume ever.
@tylerl Definately up there.
I think I'm going to whip up some flammables and entertain the neighborhood kids this year.
She (yes she) pulls it off quite well
Last year i rigged my potato cannon to fire candy at a low velocity with my compressor.
18:19
evening gents
afternoon lad
18:38
bb @kalina uder?
@Simon don't sum Chtulu
soz
She's gonna eat us all, run!
@Simon Be not afraid of the beast.
@DavidFreitag I have not been trained to fight a such monster.
I am not ready.
Then now is the best time to learn
What's the worst that could happen? You get eaten? You'll make it back out eventually.
18:42
I should be fine as long as she swallows.
@tylerl I had one of those too. I think I threw it out last time I moved house.
Oops, @AviD is here.
I thought it was gonna be a perfect crime.
18:58
@ScottPack not... quite.
Evenin' all
Jeeze, these Europeans don't understand how time works.
Afternoon!
@ScottPack see here:
Under the Biblical system of levirate marriage known as Yibbum, Halizah (or Chalitzah ; ) is the ceremony by which a widow and her husband's brother could avoid the duty to marry after the husband's death. The ceremony involves the taking off of a brother-in-law's shoe by the widow of a brother who has died childless, through which ceremony he is released from the obligation of marrying her, and she becomes free to marry whomever she desires (). Only one brother-in-law need perform the ceremony. The old custom of the levirate marriage () is thus modified in the Deuteronomic code attrib...
@Simon hush now colonist

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