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02:22
Congrats, @JeffFerland!
Oh, and it looks like @HendrikBrummermann as well!
03:16
@ScottPack Oh, wow... somebody put some effort into giving us the bump.
 
3 hours later…
06:34
Oh, wow! Science Fiction and Fantasy is out of beta, and looking sweet!
 
4 hours later…
10:39
@RoryAlsop That is interesting... I read an answer on here linking to somewhere about cutting ethernet cables so that could happen. Really interesting.
Also a former colleague of mine ran a Tor node at home as a honeypot exercise... that was interesting...
 
2 hours later…
12:26
@JeffFerland It doesn't seem like that much of an effort.
 
3 hours later…
14:57
Yay - congrats on our new 10k's - @JeffFerland and @HendrikBrummermann
Wooo... retirement.... :P
STNG fans, enjoy:
15:37
I'm nearly at 5k... :(
Congrats @JeffFerland and @HendrikBrummermann. Do you like the power tools @Jeff ?
@Ninefingers We're such a small site that there isn't a lot to do. Dashboards for high / low voted answers are cool, and seeing deleted posts. Also, I approved an edit this morning (woohoo)
Having the 10k tools makes it a lot easier to keep track of pending actions
Like, if you go to /review there is a close tab that lists all the questions with close votes.
grumbling about the lack of "vote to migrate" options
Flag baby flag!
You come across something in particular you want moved?
@ScottPack A few days ago. Just miffed that we've had the migration list on meta for 5 months and haven't implemented it.
15:52
@JeffFerland I understand the reasoning. Let's wait until there is sufficient data to determine where we actually migrate stuff
However, what is the definition of "sufficient"
You should have access to migration stats now, yes?
7
Q: Building our own migration list

M'vyNow we've graduated from beta, wouldn't it be time for us to set our migration list? I would propose: meta.security of-course superuser serverfault webapps math / theoretical.cs / stackoverflow Does the moderators have some feedback on this in term of statistical of previous migrations? Th...

It has been researched twice with the same results.
Morning, @schroeder.
morning
@JeffFerland I hadn't actually seen those updates. Whoops.
That's a pretty fast drop off
Oh, you still looking for work, @JeffFerland?
@ScottPack Still considering my options. :)
15:58
Looks like Yale-New Haven Hospital has a few security jobs open.
Of course, the downside is that it's in New Haven.
@ScottPack Yup. Big downside.
"Looking for work" will probably be a running joke until I graduate or a miracle offer lands in my lap.
Graduate, eh? What program and how far along?
@ScottPack Info & comms tech, 1 semester away.
I've been part-timing it for a long time.
I can understand that.
(graduating with a 4 year degree and an 8 year resume)
16:03
I've been exactly one thesis away from finishing my MS for a few years.
@ScottPack perfectionist procrastinator?
Nah, had I been a perfectionist I would have finished a long time ago. Because I would have had enough done that my boss, wife, and advisor would have just submitted the damn thing for me.
More like getting distracted with work/life and not making the time to do it.
I am also in college for InfoSec while working full-time in the field. I have not been impressed with InfoSec education at my institution or in other programs that I have looked at.
I've not dealt with any IS/IA programs, so I don't really have any first hand experience. Mine is straight CS.
Bachelor degrees need to stop popping up in every friggin' emerging field that's out there.
16:09
@JeffFerland No doubt.
No place should be offering an undergraduate degree in security. The field isn't mature enough.
Here we have, principally, two computer related programs. CS out of the Engineering school, and ITS out of Communications. So, in effect, you have the theory and design of computation in one and the practical and professional IT in the other.
I see no reason for there not to be a security focus in one of those, but a separate degree is a bit much.
I agree that the field is far too new. The program head is an old SANS instructor who is trying to replicate the SANS experience in a college setting. The focus is on security administration, which is something, but it leaves a lot to be desired.
You guys think this is worth migrating?
0
Q: Security implications of having files owned by the apache user?

am4Currently running a LAMP instance that developers are using for a variety of webapps. I have the following scenario: Multiple developers need access to create and modify files under /var/www/html The developers need to be able to access each other's code in case they are out on vacation, ...

By and large the SF community seems to be fairly reticent to migrate things to us, but this seems to walk the line for me.
@ScottPack Good to accept, don't know if they'd call it good to migrate, though.
16:17
I would migrate due to the implications of any helpful answer
@schroeder What?
@JeffFerland any helpful answer is not a server-based answer, it's a security implication. Such implications need a security oversight.
Well hello question!
I totally flagged it. I flagged it hard!
16:26
Ha
I am brand new here, but I can see the value and I like the community that has built up. Is there anything that I can help out with anything?
@schroeder Our tag wikis could use better articles if you're feeling ambitious. Otherwise, answer questions, hang out in chat, and acclimate to being one of us :)
Tag wiki edits that are approved will net you some rep too... can never remember how much it is.
I'll take a look
Almost any activity that nets you one of these: security.stackexchange.com/badges will be helpful, like editing etc
16:31
@Ninefingers 2 rep per edit. The excerpt and the full description count separately.
Getting some quick rep right now may be hard. We have a pretty dang high answered percentage.
@ScottPack Ah ok, thanks. I'm not an active participant anywhere where I've had the chance to actually gain rep from that :(
I though about editing, but I'm actually not sure what criteria to use for changes
@Ninefingers I got the last 100 rep to 2k from edits :)
@schroeder Generally, don't change the intent of the OP and avoid minor edits. So don't go too big or too small. But adding in links, correcting multiple spelling errors, better titles and tags all help.
@schroeder Officially, the SEI want substantive changes that increase readability and or clarity without modifying intent.
16:33
kk - that helps
Personally, I almost don't care about the size of the edit so long as it increases readability/clarity and/or brings it in line with community standards.
The reasons for rejecting an edit are:
copied content This edit plagiarizes content from an external source without proper attribution.
invalid edit This edit is incorrect or an attempt to reply to or comment on the existing post.
radical change This edit changes too much in the original post; the original meaning or intent of the post would be lost.
too minor This edit is too minor; suggested edits should be substantive improvements addressing multiple issues in the post.
vandalism This edit introduces spam, defaces the post in some way, or is otherwise inappropriate.
Just keep in mind that every time you edit a question it bumps it to the top of the main page, so if you're doing mass cleanups be careful to do them slowly.
oh - good point
That includes retagging, by the way.
16:35
Yay. I've approved, improved, and rejected edits today. I feel like a champ.
Goddamnit @Jeff!
I agree with @ScottPack - on crypto I generally ignore the "too minor" reason entirely if it helps improve the post, although I do sometimes hit the improve button.
But @schroeder if you're ever not sure pop in here, someone'll be able to explain what to do.
will do
@Ninefingers I've been known to do something as simple as searching for the word "thanks" and just stripping it out.
One this morning was changing a 10<super>24</super> to a 10<super>308</super> -- textually minor but really important. :)
16:38
I think, in most cases, that would qualify as 'too minor', but I consider it a community standards thing.
I give up
@ScottPack That's a big one on SO that I do all the time. I also search for and flag "email me"
@Ninefingers Yeah, I dislike those.
@ScottPack There, I upvoted your competing answer. :)
I haven't gone on a real flagging spree lately.
On SF we've lately had a problem with flags being rejected for seemingly invalid, or no reason given.
As such I've been nervous to actually go a flaggin.
@JeffFerland I would love to, but I have to wait a few more hours :)
16:41
speaking of, how would you handle a vendor response: security.stackexchange.com/a/9747/6253
@ScottPack I think it must be hard with the volume to get it right all the time. On crypto I or Paulo or Thomas can look at pretty much every case there is; on SO/SF it's more "if the community can sort it..."
@Ninefingers But only mods can mark flags as good or bad. There's been a feeling lately that we don't have enough mods that are actually active in the community, so who knows.
@schroeder I think he handled it correctly.
He wasn't shilling his product, clearly outed his involvement.
@schroeder Ooh, +1 to him.
@ScottPack Yeah I saw. I was actually in SF chat briefly and I've seen the meta.sf post.
I don't think it's a very good answer, but for a vendor response I think he did great.
16:45
I'm not sure the requirement to be always active is necessarily fair. I don't answer all that much on crypto, but I do respond to flags, edit, vote, retag etc. That said, I'm always around on meta and in chat, so...
@Ninefingers It's pretty unfortunate, really. I think the flagging issue is what really triggered it. At least one person doesn't seem to be taking the, "unless demonstrated otherwise assume the flag was given in good faith and mark as helpful, even if you don't act on it". advice to heart.
@Ninefingers I think that's more the concern. I'm not as concerned with the mods answering and having high rep, I just want them to be involved.
If we, as a community, come to a consensus on how to handle certain situations in chat and/or meta, then the mods should be aware of that. If all they do is handle flags and such, then how will they know?
@ScottPack This is true. They do need to know. If anyone raises a Q on meta.crypto (or meta.sec here) the mods get notified in the top left, so they should really know and review what's going on.
I'd be tempted to comment just to show I'd seen it.
Whilst we're at it, here or with crypto?
0
Q: How do GPG verify succesfull decryption?

MelpomeneHow do GPG verify that it has succeeded with decryption (in i.e. the symmetric encryption)? Is something appended to the clear text so there exist some expected data? $ gpg -c test.txt $ gpg -d test.txt.gpg returns gpg: decryption failed: bad key when wrong key is entered. How does it kn...

It's probably ontopic on crypto, but where these ones are concerned I like to ask.
@schroeder By the way as a quick introduction to chat - if you post links to a question or answer on their own they turn into a onebox as you see above. This also happens to youtube videos, amazon links, tweets and a few other things I can't remember.
Pretty much any image file
You can also reply to specific posts by hovering over them - on the right there's a reply icon (far right) which allows you to address a specific post by a specific user.
You can mention someone with an @, like this: @ScottPack
Snowman!
16:53
What else - we can star stuff too and it goes over here ------------------------------------------------->
erm.... stuff can be pinned too. We can schedule events, bookmark chats and a few other useful things although I don't think we use that much in this room.
Now that you point that out, @Ninefingers, I'm noticing exactly how snarky and/or nearly NSFW some of my comments are.
[tag:something] produced a icon which takes you to the questions of that tag.
@ScottPack Hehe. Yep, you can also flag stuff as offensive, although every moderator on the network and any 10ks for this site will see it if you do... usually it's only used for when someone comes along and really dumps something horrible somewhere.
Oh and everything you say here is kept on a public record going back forever and ever...
So now we can track @ScottPack's snarkiness over time :)
lol
Is there an example of a good tag wiki article that you know of?
@JeffFerland thanks
One of these days I'm going to write because I have 100 upvotes in that tag. But no badge, because I haven't answered enough questions.
There's a reject migrations button? ^.^
-1
Q: What risks is one exposed to by browsing the Internet?

vemvI which forms can visiting certain sites compromise one's system security, taking into account that browsers keep a sandbox for each opened page? Nowadays, can a malicious -or attacked- site really, for instance, steal all stored passwords from a client or infect him with a virus?

One more close vote needed to kill this thing
Posted by Alison Sperling on December 14th, 2011

The holiday season is upon us, and as another year comes to an end, it is Stack Overflow Annual User Survey time again! So, take a break from wrapping gifts and come tell us about yourself. We promise it will only take a few minutes of your time.

Of course, as the “annual” implies, we’ve been running a survey for a few years now, including last year’s survey which marked the first time the anonymous data was formally used in support of selling advertising on Stack Overflow and Server Fault. This data is an important part of keeping the lights on around here, and, as a user of either of those two sites, or any Stack Exchange site for that matter, we ask you to participate. …

17:26
tempted to sift through all posts on a hunt for the elusive 'Alot' :)
@schroeder Let me know if you find the elusive 'Alittle' :D
I used to a little but the little wasn't enough so the little got more and more...
17:52
How do I suggest tag synonyms? I don't see a 'new' button, nor do I see the ability to create synonyms as a rep reward.
18:05
@JeffFerland Royal Holloway University has an awesome security curriculum!
oh, and evening all
@JeffFerland Done
Oh damn - does that mean I lose the rep from my answer on it :-)
18:20
@schroeder Actually doing that is a mod only thing. But you can request it - normally I think people ask on meta.security.stackexchange.com
@Ninefingers ah ok
@RoryAlsop Not on close... if you hit delete you will.
But it doesn't always appear until you go to security.stackexchange.com/reputation
and do a recalc
actually with your mod powers you should be able to force a recalc on anyone...
including yourself :)
In theory, high enough rep people can do tag synonyms. However the system is pretty well unusable on any site except SO, so just rely on mods.
Even SF doesn't have enough volume to make the tag synonym system work.
Oh yeah. @schroeder I'm telling porkies - security.stackexchange.com/privileges/suggest-tag-synonyms
We could work it - four people with 2500 rep. Just have to know about it.
18:37
@Ninefingers Oh, there it is. I can never find that privileges page ...
@Ninefingers It's not that easy. You also have to have a certain rep in the tag being voted on
Thank you
@JeffFerland congratulations to 10k and your fifth rank.
Hey @Hendrik
 
1 hour later…
19:41
@HendrikBrummermann Thanks. Looks like #5 is determined between us by who is on vacation. :) Neck & neck for the long-haul.

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