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00:02
I was speaking of the scale of private (closed) versus public (open). At one extreme everything is open (no practical anonymity) and on the other everything is closed (no practical accountability). I don't pretend to know where any population's mean lies on that scale, but I would say I register more towards the private (closed) side than at least two frequent contributers.
And for reference, this is (in my faulty wetware) connected to the discussion of warning new users about the international and difficult to redact nature of contributions to IT Security.
Hmm I wonder how to make 'difficult to redact' an obvious adjective modifier to nature...
00:26
@thisjosh Ah, my ideology definitely trends more towards open in that regard. Of course, I also work for a public university, so there may be a correlation there.
Although, in practice, I feel like I trend towards closed when it comes to specifics. Largely in response to the public records laws. Walking the fine line between what's redactable and what's not under such laws is always exciting. :/
That is true.
I think the balance for a long time has been towards the private (closed) side of things in most countries, and that there is a lot to be gained by moving towards public (open).
I do worry about the mean moving too far though. I think individuals should be entitled to some privacy.
@thisjosh Unquestioned. In fact, I said as much in my elevator pitch suggestion :)
I don't ride elevators, safety and health risk, stairs have much better uptime, especially when running.
I need a symbol to indicate humor content in a sentence... (as in the above)
\May contain humor/ too long
ಠ_ಠ
00:44
@thisjosh Could just do </humor> like I do </sarcasm>
aparently ಠ_ಠ is the look of disaproval.
@thisjosh Disapproval...humor...tomato...potato...
In related news. I need to fix my fonts so that the characters actually show up. I'm not keen on hex filled boxes.
< humor> Poor analogy, potato is a vegtable and tomato is a fruit < / humor>
< humor> Did a witch doctor get to your boxes? </humor>
01:01
@thisjosh Erm... we don't usually use the opening tags. Just the closer. Kinda like saying, "in case you didn't realize... yeah, that's what this was".
No, actually I didn't realize. I noticed that if you don't put a space between the left angle bracket that the tag got removed. I fugured that people were forgetting to add in a space and it got eaten.
01:40
@thisjosh You didn't use a space in the closing tag on your last post.
Err, I was being serious. I figured people use HTML so much that its hard to force in the space.
02:10
@thisjosh Maybe I'm not following. Why the space?
If you were to write '< dummy_tag>' without the space the chat system removes all characters from the '<' to the '>' if you write </dummy_tag> the system ignores it (unless it is a valid HTML tag for chat)
Ooooh, I see. It's only the opening tag that's affected.
I think you mis-read my "in case you didn't realize" bit. I was saying that usage of only the closing tag was sort of like saying "in case you didn't realize...". Sort of like: "The sky is green </sarcasm>" = "The sky is green. In case you didn't realize, yeah I was being sarcastic."
No, I got that. I just thought that people forgot to put a space in the leading < scarcasm> resulting in it not being displayed. I though that people were putting open and close tags, but because their fingers are not used to putting the space in the open tag that it was not being desplayed.
02:42
@thisjosh Ah, no. I don't think I've ever (or if so, not often) seen the opening tag used.
 
6 hours later…
08:13
@Iszi In chat applications and IM I just use the close tag. I figure humans can mentally insert the open tag retrospectively
08:56
We now have a good queue of regular blog posts - up until the 4th of October - so that side of things is working well. We also have two more in draft - @Mvy's one on ISO27001, and my (not yet started) OWASP one. The QOTW is a bit more of a rush each week, but I think it is working okay.
Hm... too much work those day :P
I really need to finish that one :P
What do you guys/gals think? Should we be asking further ahead for the QOTW? Or would it be better to schedule them in every fortnight between the regular posts? They are by their very nature shorter and quicker than the regular ones.
@Mvy :-) Like I said, I actually need to start my Owasp one... real life keeps getting in the way
:P
09:35
morning
'morning
I was thinking it might be fun to do a blog post that discusses password strength issues and takes in a load of the security.se discussions on the topic. Any value in that?
10:14
@GrahamLee morning
@GrahamLee I reckon. a good overview of it all
Will have a go this evening, I'm taking the coach to DC4420 so should have a couple of hours to draft something (assuming I can get interwebs)
10:29
@GrahamLee cool. Passwords are the popular topic
that's what I thought. And there are confusing and conflicting ideas: should we have maximum lengths, should they be random or correcthorsebatterystaple, should we give up and use biometrics, etc.
(BTW you have to hand it to Randall: I do remember correcthorsebatterystaple)
hahahaha - it's already added to everyone's password list. Would be fun to get some stats on how many password audits come up with it over th next year
@RoryAlsop I'm just afraid of blogging about them every week. We'd never stop.
@JeffFerland I know. I good summary every once in a while could be good though. If @Graham's one wraps up a chunk of password ideas to date, then we can concentrate on other topics for a while
that's the plan. Also such a blog post would probably have a long tail of visitors
10:38
and if you can hook it into the xkcd spike...all good
10:50
I'm really all about the SEO ;)
11:02
So how many more low-value posts about ProteMac NetMine before it's actually a spam campaign?
11:58
@GrahamLee it already counts as spam in my book - I'm very intolerant:-)
posted on August 23, 2011 by Jeff Ferland

Internet connectivity issues kept me from being timely in updating, and a need for sleep upon my return led me to soak up all of the rest of BSides and DEFCON. That means just a few talks are going to be brought up. First, there’s Moxie Marlinspike‘s talk about SSL. In my last post, I had [...]

12:35
Morning Gents
Afternoon @ScottPack
Have the marauding bandits calmed down yet?
12:49
Mornin' y'allz.
Okay, can someone tell me WTF? How this doesn't make anyone more secure?
2
A: Who is responsible for a user's password's strength?

IsziIt seems to me that there's two separate issues that need to be covered in the question. Users choosing weak passwords. The responsibility for this piece can be conceivably split three ways: The Management and IT Security offices within the organization need to define appropriate policies for...

Happy diurnal isomorphism
2
@ScottPack what @Mvy said, but with a Scottish accent
XD
@RoryAlsop Sean Connery or Rab C Nesbitt?
Shurely only Sean
13:05
There are other Scotsmen?
yes, they're all called Rory
13:20
Does anyone know a good product which is equivalent to Secunia PSI (or, better, CSI) but is "free for non-profit"?
@GrahamLee Just the security ones:-) The others are called Hamish
@Iszi You answered the question, which wasn't around how someone should be more secure, it was around responsibility. I think that individual sort of missed the point of the question
I personally thought your answer had more value in it than mine, which was quite a glib summary (I was busy and harassed so didn't put a huge amount into it)
@RoryAlsop That's probably it. But, I still don't think the statement's accurate - the responsibilities I proposed, when properly executed, should still make the organization more secure. And, I see "that individual" seems to have removed his answer?
@Iszi Did you get a twat from me yesterday? I tried to do it via sms, but I'm thinking I screwed it up.
There are some folks who do seem to carry out tit for tat downvotes. Timing on your comment on his, and then his downvote of yours is interesting. Where he is concerned I wouldn't dwell on it
@ScottPack does that mean the same in Ameringlish as in 'proper' English?
@ScottPack I got something from you yesterday, but I don't think it's the one you're referring to. Checking now.
Oh, right. Thought I'd answered that.
13:29
@RoryAlsop I think probably so :)
hahahaha - that's fine then
@Iszi I can't seem to figure out the web interface well enough to see if I had sent it. Phaw.
@RoryAlsop @Iszi I would say if it does seem to be a repeated campaign then flag it. I imagine the automated abuse detector needs a lot of data before it kicks in.
I wonder if there's a British version of urbandictionary. That would be pretty neato.
imperialtionary?
@GrahamLee We can flag comments, not down-votes. :-(
13:32
@Iszi flag in the general sense of "inform mods"
@ScottPack +1 but we'd need an Aussie one to go with it as well.
I hope we don't end up with slashdot-style metamoderation, though.
@GrahamLee It's one of the 'usual suspects' who responds in an interesting way to negative comments - but who also has some good answers, so the automatic detector probably won't pick it up. It isn't consistently sustained.
that's why mod involvement might be needed
yep - think we should keep an eye, and see how it goes - he has had various warnings in the past
If I get time later on I'll pose the question on Teachers
13:36
anyway, back later - another interview. Then I'm off to DC4420 - I'll try and draft that blog post on the way (or on the way back after I've had some beers)
Have a good time at 4420. Feel free to provide summary of the cool stuff
@RoryAlsop That's the really odd part - it not being "consistently sustained". Every time he comes back I find myself wondering "weren't we just rid of him"?
@Iszi Would this question (see pointer) be good for any of the SE sites, or would it get shot down for "shopping recommendation"?
Hmmm - thinking it is a bit 'shopping' as it stands. However, why not try asking "Is there any way to do x, y and z (where x, y and z are key attributes you need in a Secunia alternative) with free software"
that sounds more like an answerable question which isn't just shopping
what do you think
am I just stretching with that one
13:51
@RoryAlsop It sounds like that question probably would find an acceptable answer, but it still sounds "shopping"-ish.
which ?
@RoryAlsop Regarding the previously inquired upon word. Do you use it to mean the same as 'twit', i.e., a fool?
14:12
erm, no - quite a bit less SFW than that
@ScottPack Dunno about the other side of the pond, or other parts of the U.S., but that's definitely not what it means down here.
@RoryAlsop Yeah, that sounds right.
14:26
Oh good. I think we're all on the same page, then. :)
14:37
Isn't this just what every IT Security guy would like to overhear in the hallway: "Hey, did you get that e-mail?" "I didn't recognize the e-mail address, so I deleted it."
Yay - it's working ;-P
Well, it said IRS, so I figured it was important enough to follow up on.
That's what took my respect for the CISSP below the red line.
@ScottPack that's a popular meme this Autumn. I'm not going to renew this year
Respect was later made unsalvageable due to an incident on this very site.
@ScottPack Oooh, which?
14:41
I try to make it a point to not finger (giggity) users explicitly. It shouldn't be too difficult to find, though.
Hoping it wasn't something I said (blamerory meme)
@RoryAlsop Oh no, nothing at all to do with you. Just a user that clearly had no experience and no freaking clue about the industry, working on (and then receiving) his CISSP.
14:56
ahh - yes
I think it has value in a specific area - relatively junior security practitioner needing to get their CV past initial HR filtering
Oh, @ScottPack - Interesting coinkydink: I'm supposed to be off work next Friday.
but not much else, sadly - think it has turned into a revenue stream for ISC2
@Iszi Excellent!
The real unfortunate part, is that you're supposed to have, at minimum, 3 years in the field.
If you compare to the value ISACA provide to members (which is huge in terms of documentation, standards, events yada yada) then ISC2 doesn't come close
That's assuming a prior cert and an applicable degree.
14:59
@ScottPack I've got prior certs. Still don't qualify. :-(
@Iszi With my schooling, I think I do now.
It's really close, so I would have to check the maths.
but the problem is that that minimum doesn't help stop people qualifying for the CISSP but who really aren't capable in the security field
which is why I treat it as almost that entry level - like a CEH (although with a different focus)
When hiring, I would accept a CISSP for a junior, entry level recruit, but it wouldn't convince me I should take them on as an experienced hire
How do you feel about GIACs?
Most of the SANS certs actually seem to be of high value. If I saw someone with a GIAC Gold in something I would assume they were a leader in that field
GIAC on a CV puts you much higher up my hiring list
15:15
That's good to hear.
I'm actually excited, we're pretty far down the path of getting a SANS FlexPass
While not cert granting, at least I'll be able to get some good training.
To pass most of them you actually need to be a practitioner with in depth experience, whereas CISSP can easily be bootcamped
15:34
So, I've been looking for jobs recently, don't have a cert, do have a reputation. Not been a problem.
That makes sense to me.
In other news, about to start on that post. I'll draft locally because I'm on $crappynet, and upload to blogoverflow when I get a chance
Certs are basically a poor man's reputation.
If you don't have one of your own, then you're trading on the rep of the granting agency.
spot on
or, more accurately, you're trading on the mean reputation of all the other grantees
I know. That's why I said it.
Too shay.
15:39
@GrahamLee reputation counts for so much more - once you have it. I do see the point in the certs for folks who are newer, or not well known in a particular industry or space.
And high value certs are still a plus for experienced folks eg the GIAC Gold, or CREST
Also things like full Membership of the IISP - as to get it you have to have extensive experience and be able to demonstrate your knowledge and experience in a grilling interview
:-)
/me sighs
stupid website thinks there are no locations within 10,000 miles of Oxford
Double click on the Windows RSoT installer, and the drive grinds so much I think it will fall out.
16:06
This might sound dumb, but, if I want to set up an SSH key, I need to generate that on the server-side, I can't do that from my client, can i?
I have login/password from a client-side, I'd like to use a key instead. Keys need to be generated on the server, or am I missing something here?
@ScottPack Sent you a couple DMs on Twitter.
Hey, would a question along the lines of "Help me ID this vulnerability" be on-topic?
As in, I have Vulnerability Scanner x reporting a vulnerability with Name a, Descrption b, and proprietary ID # c. Can anyone give me more details?
'Cause Name, Description, and ID are really friggin vague in this particular case.
16:40
@RoryAlsop and anyone else who cares: my post is now pending review at blogoverflow
17:04
@ScottPack @GrahamLee - I can respect most of what you guys said yesterday regarding my particular issue. I think it's best if I just keep to myself. Scott - No problem on sounding douchey at that one point when you said something like "At the risk of sounding douchey". I have absolutely no problem with that. At least you put a horribly fine point on your statement.
@ScottPack @GrahamLee - Graham - Valid on most of your points. I just think there should DEFINITELY be an appropriate place to put that type of question...and it is currently lacking if my question is out of bounds IMHO. And good at your blogoverflow post thing.
17:21
@Incognito You can generate the key anywhere but it needs to get installed onto the server. If you generate the key on the client it is preferable to transfer the key to the server in the most secure manner possible. In decending order: transfer physically using removable media, on a closed network, and a high security network, VPN, and lastly on an encrypted internet connection.
@Incognito Warning: there are several keys
the server must have one, called "the server key"
to replace a password-based login, you need a "client key"
which you use on the client
Oh good Thomas is here.
2
so that key is best generated on the client
try ssh-keygen
This doesn't seem correct: "AES-GCM or CCM will tell you if the encrypted data was tampered with." Counters only tell you about the order not the integrity.
@Incognito - there are a bunch of ways to do that...my favorite is a custom service that uses AES-192 with a known key to transfer the key from serverside to clientside. then use ssh.
17:23
once the client key is generated, you still have to store on the server the public part
typically in .ssh/authorized_keys
so that the server accepts the key as authenticating you
@thisjosh GCM and CCM are encryption modes which include a keyed integrity check (a MAC)
@ThomasPornin - yes. you can do new device enrollment a couple of ways that are reasonably secure. checkpoint has this figured out. take a look at their implementation
Oh wow, so every block has a integrity check? Holy computational overdrive!
@thisjosh No, not every block. Only the whole message.
If you have one corrupt block (i.e. due to channel noise) does the integrity check fail?
17:29
@this.josh - I would think an individual pack CRC would catch that.
@thisjosh That's the point of integrity checks
pack == packet
I am not sure we are using the term "block" with the same meaning
@Iszi I'll have to get back to you on your question. I'm dealing with a toddler, though.
okay i'll just stop
17:31
GCM and CCM are encryption modes: they use a block cipher such as AES, and turn it into a way to encrypt a message (a sequence of bytes of arbitrary length)
Ok if I have a message M and I am using a block cipher that processes n bytes at a time I think of n as the block size
@thisjosh It is not a fully practical definition
For the encryption part, GCM internally relies on counter mode (CTR), in which the AES is used only to encrypt successive values of a counter
this generates a key-dependent stream, which is combined with the data by bitwise XOR
so you can say that you encrypt the data one bit at a time
have something to say if you want to hear it...say so or don't
or maybe you want to say that blocks are 128-bits because the AES primitive works on 128-bit values
so is the block length 1 or 128 ?
or maybe longer ?
because GCM, for a n-bit message, will produce something a bit longer
say n+128
(or so)
yes the remainder of the 128 bits that requires padding out to the proper length
17:34
@thisjosh and no... that's the trick
with CTR there is no padding
the extra length is to fit the MAC
@ScottPack Ok. I just today realized exactly how quickly this is coming up.
Surprise!
If a message encrypted in a counter mode has some bits of the encrypted message are corrupted in transit, will a counter mode be able to decrypt bits after the corrupted bits?
@Iszi Anyone want to help me out with this?
@Iszi I thought you already asked that question?
17:40
@ScottPack Erm, sort of I guess. I'd asked it in a more general "where can I get a CVE ID for CVE_MAP_NOMATCH" vulnerabilities. It wasn't a specific "help me ID this vulnerability [insert available details]".
@thisjosh counter mode is just XOR with a key-dependent stream
it is very resilient to corruption: if you flip a bit in the encrypted message, this "just" flips the corresponding bit in the decrypted data
this is good for resistance to noise, bad for resistance to attacks (the attacker can "flip" bits at will)
@Iszi I would call it on topic, although you may find that finding a General answer is difficult.
encryption on cell phones uses the same kind of XOR with a key-dependent stream
for the same reasons
@ScottPack That's exactly it - I'm not looking for the general answer this time. Looking for a specific item.
@Iszi The problem there might be localization :) Worth a shot, though.
What's the worst that could happen? It'll get closed.
17:47
@Thomas In a chaining mode all bits after the corrupted bits do not decrypt correctly?
@thisjosh that's not what chaining modes are meant for
@thisjosh This is what I thought. I keep trying to use ssh-copy-id to accomplish this, but the SSH server has disabled all subsystems exept FTP. =/
with CBC, if you flip one bit in the encrypted stream, this typically garbles the 128-bit block in which the flip occurs, and flips one bit in the next block
with CFB, one flipped bit may change a lot of things in the subsequent data
it really depends on the chaining mode
propagation of errors is not considered to be a security feature
mainly because a mode which propagates errors is also a mode which is not amenable to parallelism
Thanks for explaining that.
The other end isn't answering my emails asking to set up the key-exchange, so I figured I must be missing something profoundly stupid... then I get an email when I get back from lunch, "I'm not an expert when it comes to keys and stuff \\ Is't it an encryption key or a public key? \\ Sorry for being stupid "
17:55
I suspected that the server wasn't one you had control or authority over.
@Incognito An additional complication is that for key-based client authentication to work, the server must be configured to accept that
RSAAuthentication yes
PubkeyAuthentication yes
in /etc/ssh/sshd_config
this might not be the default setting, and if the sysadmin on the server does not understand anything about ssh, you might have a hard time having him configure the server properly
If you don't have control or authority over the server, making your ssh sessions more secure may not increase your security. If the administrator doesn't make the whole system more secure you are still vulnerable to the weakest link in the system.
@ThomasPornin Does the SSH respond with that information when I attempt to connect? Remember, only the ftp subsystem is enabled.
And if ftp is enabled you can be sure the system is vulnerable.
@thisjosh No, but I can't automate SFTP uploads with bash, as the commands now require keys for scripting purposes.
Well, I can, thanks to some hackery out of NIST, but I shouldn't. And my password is a very low entropy.
@thisjosh It's SFTP, and some HTTP via apache. The software's called tumbleweed on their end, which is now re-branded: axway.com
18:02
Oh ok, when people say ftp I assume ftp and not sftp.
@thisjosh It's the FTP subsystem of SSH that I'm referring to.
Hey Cool. Earthquake.
@Incognito Yes, at some point.
Generate yourself a private key (client key)
then try to connect with sftp -v
in the debug messages, you will see this if the server potentially accepts client public keys:
debug1: Authentications that can continue: publickey,password
if not, you will see this:
debug1: Authentications that can continue: password
debug1: Authentications that can continue: password,publickey,keyboard-interactive Okay, so that's a start.
So you "just" have to find a way to store your public key at the appropriate place on the server.
18:08
Problem: it's locked down really tight, if the file name isn't "Foo-n-n-n-n.txt" upload's rejected.
that's a problem, indeed
And I only have, what I suppose, is a ~/ folder.
if the server is similar to OpenSSH, then it looks for client public keys in ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
(you just copy your .pub file into that name)
Upload fails, rename fails.
so you would have to create a .ssh/ subdirectory, then upload the file into it
also OpenSSH tends to be picky about the access rights on the .ssh/ subdirectory
he wants to enforce 0700 rights, not accepting the more usual 0755
Alternatively, you could patch the sftp client to read the password from a local file, instead of asking you to type it every time
18:14
sftp> df
Server does not support [email protected] extension
sftp> mkdir test
Couldn't create directory: Permission denied
sftp> rmdir 1271872804770
Couldn't remove directory: Permission denied
sftp> ~~~
Invalid command.
sftp> rename 1271872804770 test
Couldn't rename file "/1271872804770" to "/test": Permission denied
sftp> version
SFTP protocol version 3
sftp> !ls
@ScottPack Y'know... I think I'm gonna just ask the vendor of the vulnerability scanning software. Unfortunately, with our organizational structure, there's another person to go through first.
@Iszi yay :/
If we don't get anywhere there, I'm guessing it's more than likely that nobody here can help either.
@ScottPack They're friendly enough. It's just that "extra step" bit that's generally annoying.
Typically, I go through somebody else to talk to our VA vendor as well, though I have an account on the support site.
"man ssh" indicates an interesting feature with SSH_ASKPASS
18:19
@ThomasPornin I've found something from NIST that scripts password inputs, despite ssh authors trying hard to make that a key-only thing.
if the ssh (or sftp) client is executed without a controlling terminal, but needs a passphrase, and both DISPLAY and SSH_ASKPASS are defined, then the command whose name is in the SSH_ASKPASS variable is executed, and should provide the passphrase
@Incognito expect ?
@ThomasPornin That's the one.
"expect" is the traditional answer to everything terminal-related
it predates SSH
(by the way, it is not from NIST; but NIST describes how to use it)
(expect was written by Don Libes who now works at NIST)
@ThomasPornin Interesting... When I hit nist.gov/el/msid/expect.cfm that's how it looked to me, but now I see the SF page links to the real author.
18:50
This one seem dupe-ish to anyone else?
0
Q: IT Security Learning Path

Eko Kurniawan KhannedyI am a software developer. Currently I am interested in IT security, but I have difficulties about learning pathways to IT security. Is there a learning path for IT security such as for example the path to learn the Java programming language that existed at this link: http://download.oracle.com...

@Iszi I'd say it's too vague/open-ended.
IT Security's a fairly wide domain.
Wide enough we have a SE site for it.
Any reply would really just be, "hack all night, get certified by day"
Maybe I'm being too quick to judge, however.
I thought we've seen a few questions like that.
Off-topic, I have an odd coincidence of a tinnitus flare-up with a craving for caffeine and loud music. This does not bode well.
Coffee and loud music is basically a way of life for me.
I've started a chat for music on SO's chat, "sound of source code"
We ran the pot dry at 9am, and I have a notion to only make one per day
18:55
I don't do coffee too often. My caffeine comes in the form of what I affectionately call "Gummi Berry Juice".
I drank one of those at Origins.
Wow did that feel....weird
I usually keep 2-4 of those in one of my jacket pockets. Normally run through those in one or two weeks, but some days are worse than others.
Has your body built up an immunity to the niacin yet?
Maybe. I used to be really hard-core with energy drinks like Full Throttle and Rockstar.
Typically would run through two or three big cans of those per day.
And that was some time after I'd gotten over my two-liters-or-more-per-night addiction to Mt. Dew Code Red.
So, if I'm only doing 2-4 5-hour Energy shots per 1-2 weeks, I think I'm in good shape.
Sounds a bit better on the kidneys, yeah.
19:10
It's supplemented though by a Frappuccino every weekday morning.
Definitely need that jump-start when I've got a 1 hr. drive to work.
Hey, did you know that there's some coffee flavou?ing buried within all that sugar/
Yeah. Beats waiting for the coffee to brew though. And, it's much easier to chug down as I rush out the door.
Went through the coffee addiction phase already too, only much earlier.
When I was in high school, one of my work locations was within a short walking distance of a coffee shop. Would usually go through 2-3 big cups o' coffee per shift.
I'm really trying to limit my beverages to water and alcohol these days, with only an occasional soda. Plus the aforementioned incidental energy supplies.
I try to remember to set up the pot before I leave in the evening. Otherwise, it only takes about 10 minutes to brew, so it's not too bad. The worst part is getting water. The way this building is carved up there is no good way to get to a sink.
@ScottPack See, in that 10 minutes I'm almost ready to bolt out the door.
Oh, I see the confusion. I make coffee at the office. Not at home.
19:18
@ScottPack Ah, right.
My aversion to coffee in the workplace mainly revolves around having an open-top (or easily-opened-top) beverage in my work area. Sure, it's just me in this cubicle but then again, it is me in this cubicle.
19:39
I much prefer tea, being properly British and all that.
19:54
@Iszi I voted to close on the question you link to, simply because I think its too wide to answer.
20:12
@Ninefingers Sorry, which?
Oh, that one.
@Iszi @Avid has now closed it anyway
@Ninefingers I was primarily drinking tea for quite a while, but then we hired a new guy who is also a coffee drinker.
I haven't used my kettle in probably a year or more.
20:29
@ScottPack I just prefer tea really... I like a coffee every now and then, but given a choice it'd usually be tea.
evening
@Ninefingers nice job on the QotW post :)
21:02
Right then. Got that all ready. Coffee will be waiting for me when I arrive. 2011 is awesome.
21:18
@Ninefingers Are there people who are unproperly Brittish?
@thisjosh of course, look for people with malleable upper lips
Ah found it.
My favorite energy drink brand, no longer available.
Actually available but not with my prefered graphics
@thisjosh Wow. I don't care if it actually tastes like "whoop-ass". I wanna try it!
Note the letters USA on the character's nuckles
@GrahamLee Thanks. I used to blog a bit on my own blog, but I'm still looking for a blogging engine I like that isn't wordpress before I start again.
21:32
@Ninefingers those don't exist. No-one likes any blog engines.
@GrahamLee heh - malleable:-)
evenin' all
@GrahamLee I live in hope... I started writing one on django but like all such part time projects there are more important things to do. I might try moveable type.
@RoryAlsop sounds almost exactly like "fuck"
seen my draft post?
hahahaha - oh, the memories. Haven't seen that in ages
just opening up the post now
looks good - did you write it on the way to or from dc4420?
to
hence making sense
to be fair I'm more tired than wasted right now
21:41
@GrahamLee - schedule options - can pop it in for 18th Oct in the regular schedule. Gets it in place automagically. Sound good.
@GrahamLee good event then?
sounds good to me
well, good from a networking perspective. The talks...one was some good demos of circumventing Windows policy, the rest were deacon circlejerks
@GrahamLee done - and if another password question comes up, you can always edit it in if necessary
@GrahamLee On a roll with the catchphrases tonight - deacon circlejerks...nice :-)
that was meant to be Defcon circle jerks, though actually I'll leave it as is
21:44
that's what I assumed you meant, but it is funnier this way
damn, it's got to the point where an autocorrecting keyboard is funnier than me
/me gives up drinking
hahahahaha
22:37
Some days you think about banging your head against the wall three times.
Seems like this needs to include information about the event in the question:
4
Q: Sony Attacks, what would you do?

blundersIf you where called by Sony right now, had 100% control over security, what would you do in the first 24-hours?

And more generally how do we keep aging posts relevent?
What the @&^# we have no integrity tag!
23:06
Yes, work sucks today.
23:52
@thisjosh We're, by and large, information security professionals. How on earth would an tag be on-topic?

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