A few days ago, Kahler Nygard reportedly received a boarding pass indicating secondary screening was required, but that pat-down was reportedly never done. So when the plane landed, they took the passenger off the plane ahead of the others and requested that he submit to the screening at the dest...
> The proposition screening a passenger after the flight might retroactively increase the fight's safety is, I think we can all agree, counter to the fundamental nature of causality.
Salts are stored in the plain text and readily available with the hashed passwords if the password database is compromised. What if we encrypt the salt using password itself? Doesn't it make offline dictionary attack more difficult as the attacker now has to identify the salt to break the passwor...
@LucasKauffman The point he has is that he's not introducing any vulnerability, which is good.
However, the only advantage is the extra step an attacker has to take and try to decrypt the salt with the potential password before hashing and comparing, which is quite negligible given that most encryption schemes are quite fast.
@Terry Which reminds me, I asked the guy about Sentry. They used it for one month and that's it. He said it wasn't really for them. Had they had multiple installations of multiple projects, that would have been great for them
So anyway, it appears as though Apply Pay stores credit card info on your device in a tokenized form instead of the credit card info itself. That seems like a positive thing for security.
@Adnan That doesn't appear to be the case from the stuff I have read? It sounds more like the token itself is handled by the CC companies.
Unless the marketing speak is misleading of course.
> With Apple Pay, instead of using your actual credit and debit card numbers when you add your card, a unique Device Account Number is assigned, encrypted and securely stored in the Secure Element, a dedicated chip in iPhone and Apple Watch. These numbers are never stored on Apple servers.
my prayers to satan have been awnsered, the coffee machine down at HR's office broke, if they want coffee they have to go down to the lobby and buy some >:D
@Simon nah, there's there is only one person working there, and she has all the qualities that makes me disgust her using up our oxygen
she reminds me of dem westboro bapist church nuts, shes also really fat, mean, and has an opinion about everyone and everything, with NO knowledge about it at all
so she rolls through the corridor every now and then to go downstairs and get coffee
A shift cipher shifts every letter of a word by "n" amount and creates new word. The number of possible keys in the shift cipher is equal the size of the alphabet set from which the word is derived. For example if the words are derived from the set of lowercase letters there are 26 different keys...
@Kisunminttu Memorize a bunch of stuff, put up with a semi-decent and heavily-bureaucratic educational system, and then you'll have your Bachelor's. Memorize a bunch more stuff, create a low quality Word document and call it a thesis, and you'll get your Masters. Finally, convince the school that you know what you're doing (which isn't that difficult where we live, because they're so desperate for anything!), and you have your PhD position. Yay!
@Adnan My teacher just sent me that our thesis appointment for tomorrow is now cancelled because I submitted the draft (5 pages) to her today, which is apparently too late.
"Three days in advance" and now I'll just have to wait another month for the next appointment :D