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04:00 - 14:0014:00 - 22:00

14:00
btw, I'm not so sure that it's just about entropy - in my answer I pointed to the contrast between focusing on entropy, and usability.
@ThomasPornin @AviD actually we've started blaming social media, apparently. The regime is debating turning off the internet during the riots.
@GrahamLee oo, another egypt....
Well, for the moment, they're targeting Twitter, Facebook and BES.
BES?
@AviD BBM exactly
14:03
Bes (also spelled as Bisu) was an Egyptian deity worshipped in the later periods of dynastic history as a protector of households and in particular mothers and children. In time he would be regarded as the defender of everything good and the enemy of all that is bad. While past studies identified Bes as a Middle Kingdom import from Nubia, some more recent research believes him to be an Egyptian native. Mentions of Bes can be traced to the southern lands of the Old Kingdom; however his cult did not become widespread until well into the New Kingdom. Iconography Modern scholars such as...
BlackBerry Messenger
@GrahamLee Well, we are blaming Twitter for the XKCD/password question. Cameron is also entitled to have a go against the usual scapegoat.
apropo egypt?
ahh right
"The government is exploring whether to turn off social networks or stop people texting during times of social unrest."
@GrahamLee Why not all communications means
14:04
@Mvy thanks, Crackberry Messenger not enterprise server
@Mvy because that would lose more votes?
humm
There is no point blackouting the internet
people would just turn to SMS
or else
or mail
@Mvy they said texting, too.
Or whatever people used in the old times when they organised in such events
and, just in case....
7
Q: How can citizens prevent government-led Internet blackouts?

NickThe United Nations now considers Internet access a basic human right. [PDF] Despite the questionable effectiveness of Internet blackouts in silencing a populace and preventing uprisings1, it's worrying that governments can flick a kill switch, as they did in Egypt on 27 January 2011. To that end...

@Mvy pamphlets
And seriously, there were calls during the English Civil War for printing presses to be controlled or outlawed.
14:08
This is going to have bad repercutions...
Just like all those restrictions of civil liberties in America did?
Or rather, didn't?
yeah, but are the English people as sheepy as lazy americans?
They're all out rioting because they saw other people get away with it, so...
copycat behavior
Jul 21 at 13:38, by AviD
well, I for one, am proud to be american, knowing that we are a nation that can waste huge amounts of time and resources watching stupid, but beautiful, stuff like silhouette dancing.
and thats americans for you. no more tea party any time soon...
14:12
@AviD More than anything else, I thought it would be funny to find a dupe and flag it :)
@ScottPack oh I agree... and I'm tempted to close it, just for spite.
but, I think I wont, because then my answer wouldn't apply.
;)
"Il ne faut pas jeter le bébé avec l'eau du bain" :P
hey dont get all entropied up in here!
LOL
BTW I found the expression exists in english too : throw the baby out with the bathwater
14:18
or rather, "Don't throw out the baby with the bath water"
No, I think Frenchy got it right
@AviD Well in this case yes, the negation applies.
Depending if you do it or not :P
I'm starting to believe that the -> synonym is overly aggressive.
while it could be said that entropy is a measure of randomness, as a tag I'm thinking they apply to different things.
like, xkcd should be entropy, not random.
@AviD I'm inclined to say: please don't
Because lack of entropy is != random
@Mvy the synonym already exists.
14:21
And if entropy is random, then why do we talk about entropy anymore?
hmm
from looking at the questions in that tag, I'm starting to think: entropy is about measuring it, and random is about creating it.
> entropy is a measure of the uncertainty associated with a random variable.
wikipedia
yes, thats kinda what I said ;)
My speed is decreasing yes :P
I think I'm coming around to Avi's notion
14:23
now, the has 14 q's, I think about 4-5 should be entropy, a couple entropy AND random, the rest just random....
While the two are intrinsically linked, they are not the same thing.
any entropy-takers, wanna have a look? @ThomasPornin @nealmcb @RoryAlsop
@ScottPack thats what I'm saying...
and, dya thnk I categorized the tags correctly?
@AviD I was restating so that it was immeasurably more approachable.
And as such, while my statement was sufficiently random, it is not entropic
:)
hmm, seems @nealmcb agrees with this.... We generate "random" numbers, but we don't generate "entropy", we measure it, e.g. when looking at passwords. – nealmcb Jan 16 at 6:47
in a comment on one of the tagged qs
or rather, it seems it just took a while for me to come around to what he said back then :$
so, yeah? get rid of that synonym?
14:39
@ScottPack done!
now, for retagging....
Wait, did you remove the tag, or revert it back to it's own tag?
I removed the synonym.
i.e. entropy can be applied as a tag.
e.g. this
80
Q: XKCD #936: Short complex password, or long dictionary passphrase?

Billy ONealHow accurate is this XKCD from August 10, 2011? XKCD 936: Password Strength I've always been an advocate of long rather than complex passwords, but most security people are against me on that one. (at least that I've talked to) However, XKCD's analysis seems spot on to me. Am I missing someth...

Oh they are talking about the chocolate/garlic thing in the podcast :P
Is there ever anything interesting in those things?
@ScottPack chocolate/garlic
@Mvy thats where I read about it...
14:47
ok ^^
hhm, I think I just coined another eponymous law...
Hey hu?
AviD's Theory of Usability Dependancy: Security, at the expense of usability, comes at the expense of security.
Or did I hear this somewhere else?
hm?
15:03
here's a random thought, since there is a twatterer bot for the site, does it make sense to have the site automatically post "interesting" questions to google+, too?
take into account I've never been on either (twitter or g+ )
Be careful for making feature requests to SEI. You'll probably be banned
@AviD It would, but from what I've heard it would seem Google wouldn't be too keen on that at this stage.
Right now, it only wants G+ accounts that are associated to actual people and they have to use real names.
@Iszi They opened it up to businesses a few weeks ago
@Iszi ah, right, Id heard that.
@ScottPack Oh? Wonder when they'll open it up to Apps users?
Holy crap, it is!
...or not.
Looks like they've just made the page saying its not available, prettier.
15:06
Give it a few years
@ScottPack Seeing as I only just recently signed up for Twitter, I don't think I'll be too hurt by doing that. Still, it's damn annoying that they still haven't made this service available to what is probably their most dedicated user base.
@Iszi That's typical, though
right, you're already dedicated, they dont need to sell to you.
well, boys.... Topic #2 - its bbq time!
XD
mind you, its not just a couple o' guys slapping some burgers on the grill... fancy 5-star chef's bbq
15:17
6.5k view on XKCD :!
bloody hell
@AviD Crap. Now you've given me a craving that I've no chance of resolving in the near future.
hehe
you have no idea
Seems like a great day for Sonny's, but I'm kinda bound to stick nearby my current task.
its an awesome spread, all-you-can-eat, of course...
15:18
@AviD - Shut up and go enjoy your lunch. :-P
dinner!
Whatever.
no drinking, though - I have to drive back home
Only makes me more jealous, because that means you're off work for the day.
keep an eye on that xkcd question for me, willya?
@Iszi ha! you forget, I work west coast hours.
15:20
@AviD Oh, right. Well the west coast has barely gotten into work, let alone thought about the second/third meal of the day. What are you doing on break already?
I wonder what I have at home. Unlikely to be bbq
Well, I'm disconnecting to start another shot at this scan. L8rz!
good luck
@ScottPack with the bbq? nah, dont need luck... :P
The XKCD question is spawning offspring:
1
Q: What password cracking software is commonly used?

user606723I am curious to know how secure my passwords are. What password cracking software is commonly used? Preferably open source.

15:26
@AviD So when you say bbq, do you mean smoked pork/brisket with some kind of sauce? Or do you generically mean grilled food?
Is there a simple way to search for questions with a specific tag and to which I have not responded ?
Yes: this set is empty XD
Seriously I don't think you can do such a search
There are 249 questions and only 113 of them have been Blessed by my Wisdom. I feel a responsibility towards the 136 others.
4
I tried to do something related in the past :
2
Q: Question I am involved in

M'vyI was wondering if there is (or is planned) a feature to know when I already posted a comment and/or answer on a question. I mean, I often browse tagged questions and I do not always remember if I gave an answer to a particular question. I think it would be appreciated to have let's say an icon...

Maybe I should rewrite the question as a question
may get me more review
Seems the "get straight to the point"-titles are not triggering people
Bring up unicorns
15:33
@ScottPack YEAH!
 
1 hour later…
16:47
XKCD has a 182 score on the stackexchange drop-down
I don't think I've seen anything hit 200
It was 207 some hours ago I think
17:37
175 now
What generates that score? Some super-secret-sauce?
17:54
@Mvy If you need attention use the word password in the title and include a cartoon.
@Iszi I would imagine that a Stack Exchange founder with a very high level of exposure and connectivity has a lot to do with it.
18:21
Check out the up-down votes on this question's answers:
8
Q: How to check each row against another to find possible mySQL row name posssible similarities?

NikolaiI am having an autosuggest script that suggests products name that are found inside my mySQL DB. The product_name field is indexed, FULLTEXT and the products are from multiple shops entries. Suppose I have those two names below that are the same product but slightly different name because of the...

@ThomasPornin only 113 have been Blessed by your Wisdom? Can we force-change his name to Saint Thomas?
@JeffFerland The Vatican can -- but they do so only a few decades after the death of the subject, so I am not too keen on the prospect.
Every answer has a 0 score... because they've all been voted down as mucha s they ahve been up.
Technically a "saint" is someone whose soul is guaranteed to have made it to Heaven (as is demonstrated by miracles: if a saint can grant miraculous healing then this implies that he has God's ear, which cannot logically happen if he is not in Heaven). In particular, a saint is necessarily dead.
Ahhhh the literalism!
Old age, it beats the alternative
18:31
However, the "prophet" career path is not incompatible with being alive.
Ahoy there landlubbers. Anybody here?
@VineetReynolds I am.
err, any topic to discuss?
I am not here.
18:57
Nor am I.
<-- is absent.
Its quite slow today.
I don't suppose there exists a programmatic way to convert a network block in cidr notation into a pcre, eh?
@ScottPack 1. It's CIDR, not cider. 2. PCRE?
PCRE=Perl compatible regex
19:04
Perl Compatible Regular Expression
Oh. I remember putting together a regex to accurately search for IP addresses is a bit of a pain in the arse.
Well, for base network stuff there is a module.
I just have particular network blocks that I need to convert over.
Guess it's the old fashion way
19:34
0
Q: How can I protect my computer from my potentially malevelous colleagues?

Coffee Nesteanew guy here, hope this is on-topic. So, I work in this small company (10 people) where we do stuff in programming, modelling and web site management. I started recently working there (2 months) right after I graduated. My work is not exactly programming related, but I have enough knowledge to d...

How does one answer that? Bordering on paranoia.
@VineetReynolds My answer: Physical access PWNS. End of story.
Yeah, I wish I could put it bluntly that while he's out for lunch, someone could just copy his HDD over.
@VineetReynolds Whole disk encryption may defeat that initially. But if Mallory can sneak in a hardware-based keylogger, that's compromised as well.
I think I have an answer to another question that has some relevance here...
Oh, make that a couple answers.
11
A: How can I prevent someone from accessing a Windows XP system via boot disk?

IsziThe real issue here is that the attacker only needs physical access to your hard drive in order to read or manipulate the files which contain your password hashes. There is already a thread on SuperUser which has some recommendations, which I will likely repeat here. http://superuser.com/q/2220...

Trucrypt?
11
A: I'm leaving my job and want to erase as many personal details etc. as possible; any tips?

IsziThe proper answer for this question is very situational, and dependent upon the policies and procedures in place at your company. Many companies have in place methods of backing up portions of the drive meant for user data, or even the entire drive, across the corporate network. If they've perf...

@VineetReynolds Again, hardware keylogger = PWNED. The only thing TrueCrypt might be able to do to get around that, is to use a key file stored on a thumb drive that he always keeps with him.
19:46
I just changed all my passwords once I reached home. Most of them have 120-150 bits of entropy. Much simpler.
But, now we're talking to major system modifications on company hardware.
Umm, my previous statement was wrt to your answer on leaving the job.
@VineetReynolds Sorry, which? Truecrypt or passwords?
Yeah, going back to the original question, he'll need a portable disk that is on his body.
@VineetReynolds And that's where we get into major modifications to corporate-owned computer systems, or storage of company data on personal hardware... both generally big no-nos.
19:47
I was referring to this -"I just changed all my passwords once I reached home. Most of them have 120-150 bits of entropy. Much simpler." After I quit, I changed all my passwords on reaching home.
Yes, modifications would be a touchy subject. Sounds like they dont have an IT dept.
@VineetReynolds Oh, that's great for your cloud-based accounts. But, anything that is (or ever has been) stored in cache or other parts of the company's hard drive are easily viewable by them.
I didn't have any personal stuff on company property. Made it much easier.
@VineetReynolds Ever access any personal webmail or social networking accounts from there?
Yes, only through HTTPS, with one particular FF plugin to warn me of cert changes.
I forget the name of that plugin
@VineetReynolds That's great to protect the data in transit. But your browser cache still belongs to the company.
Your browser may or may not be keeping those pages in cache, depending on design and configuration.
19:51
I browse from a VM. Makes it more tough.
And the account was not on AD
@VineetReynolds Only slightly
@VineetReynolds Account?
Doesn't matter where the account is. If the hard drive is company-owned, its contents are theirs.
The OS account on the VM.
@VineetReynolds That's just as useful from a data security standpoint as an OS account on a real machine, where Mallory has physical access: It's not.
I know, it's just that you can reduce the exposure greatly, unless they are get the copies of VMs.
@VineetReynolds Is the VHD on company hardware?
19:55
Yes, but little or no opportunity for copying it.
@VineetReynolds They don't do backups of that system?
No, backups were done only for Appdata or the equivalent on WindowsXP.
Sorry, I meant only for the roaming profiles.
My knowledge in ITsec is waning.
Hey Iszi, do you know of any appsec projects that need volunteers?
@VineetReynolds No, but I think @AviD might be a better person to ask.
Ok, thanks.
I was about to start one on protocol fuzzing, but I figured I'd rather see how existing projects work.
20:12
@Iszi, D.W.'s answer to that question looks like everything out of our discussion.
21:06
I decided it would be fun to pile on and add more links to the XKCD question
@JeffFerland Are you going after the publicist badge ?
@ThomasPornin So far I've only gotten announcer. Then again, I'm really shocked that 25 people followed a link I put on Twitter. That's news to me.
@ThomasPornin I think this query is what you want (warning, not tested much)
Then again, I could always grab 1k Amazon instances in sequence and use them to visit the URL....
It returns 122 questions, either my query is off or there 14 questions since the data dump that you haven't blessed
21:12
@Gilles I might have been slacking
Thanks for the query ! I wasn't aware that anybody could compose queries and run them on their servers.
@ThomasPornin It's an SE-run server
There's a public access to a read-only copy of the database (not everything, e.g. you don't get to know who voted for what)
I suppose that they have some failsafe mechanisms to avoid people using their server as free CPU time.
@ThomasPornin They do. They're mentioned somewhere on Meta Stack Overflow.
That thing is called the Data Explorer
"the data is bimonthly archival"
so the most recent crypto questions are missing, which may explain the 122 != 136
@roryalsop @grahamlee qotw 6 is in draft. I'll read over what I've written tomorrow but feel free to comment on it. any other bloggers, feel free to chip in.
21:59
1
Q: iPhone type login screen?

TheLQThe person that introduced me to Fedora had somehow made his login screen so that instead of typing in a password he used the "connect the dots" password that's popular on phones. Eg On my touchscreen/stylus laptop, I'm interested in doing this as well. However I can't seem to find the plugin ...

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