right now where I'm eating rainbow liquorice twirls while being absorbed by the bed and watching netflix I would rather sit here with a blank mind than be bouncing off the walls
Can an IP be forced to receive data from another IP (specifically IPv6 for both)? If so how does this work, and how can I prevent this from happening to me? Does that have any way to be broken? If so how can it be improved?
@AviD I should say, their espresso drinks aren't really proper, but they're fine. Their drip coffee is generally downright awful. It's massively over-roasted, as a rule. McDonald's, surprisingly, has really good drip coffee. Starbucks does have some nice beans. Or used to. They don't seem to do as much of the bean business anymore. They use to have a Sumatran that was fantastic.
I use VPNs all the time on my iPhone to get around websites being blocked and sometimes just for privacy, but are they secure?
In the video at http://techcrunch.com/2016/03/10/watch-how-easy-it-is-for-someone-to-hack-your-iphone/ the guy installed a certificate on the lady's phone that contained...
@SmokeDispenser It was a question the company I'm internshipping in asked me, and I didn't know the awnser, so I reformulated my question and posted it here
Can I just confirm that I'm not being excessively picky with something: if you submit an article to a journal, you should be able to write sentences coherently, yes?
@diagprov It's a UK based reference journal. In theory, the article is about security implications of legislation on specific sectors, but in practice, it doesn't even mention those sectors after the introduction
(not giving the full details to protect the innocent!)
But with some stalking, I like how How do I cook meth? is an acceptable question. gaming question titles always amuse me when in the hot network questions. perfect example.
@SmokeDispenser encoding isn't encrpytion... Encrpytion includes encoding but on it's own encoding lacks a key property of encryption which is that "only authorised parties can read the message"
@kalina for factual non-contentious topics it's reasonable
however I'm not a cryptographer, just a security person, so I'll defer if one of our proper crypto people disagrees ( @ThomasPornin @CodesInChaos et al)
@kalina, I do, that's why I'm standing here, trying to stand with 'technically, that is encryption, like the identity is, too, just horribly insecure'. because being right on the interwebs is so important;)
@RоryMcCune, my point was: You can construct a crypto system from any unkeyed reversable function trivially, so basically, you can use that as an encryption, but that is just horribly wrong.
Let's say someone wants to take their mate out for some sushi, but wants to surprise said mate with something referred to as "green", if you catch my drift, just before dinner..... what type? :3c
@SmokeDispenser I understand what you're saying but to me (and this is just an opinion) encryption has an implication of attempted secrecy. The word derives from "secret" . Encoding isn't intended to be secret and therefore isn't encryption
thousands of strains and you want me to choose one for somebody I've never met, whose tolerance I'm unaware of, for an activity you've not fully described