I'm trying to create a sample security token with Atmega64, And now i'm a little confused about how to program that. As it mentioned in PKCS11 Document token hardware should support about 70 function.
But my question is how should i write those function for my Atmega64 and i use AVR Studio 6 - AV...
Had SEI sent t-shirts for participation in anniversary contest? At September,28 I received email asking about my t-shirt size and address but I haven't received anything thereafter
@Polynomial heh. well, the first part of the answer should come from here. on a re-read, I see the question is more about any function for atmega, rather than specific to pkcs11, so you would be correct.
@Gilles how do you get that it's about privacy? or accountability, for that matter?
I see nothing about either, even after the edit (other than the final question, which seems disconnected from the rest of the post).
as I read it, he's worried about either no-longer-valid credentials being cached (e.g. a user that was fired), or about a misguided notion that it would be easier to crack the password on a stolen machine.
@TerryChia You could learn Java first. C# syntax began as a clone of Java, then they added extra tricks (operator overloading, delegates, inferred types, LINQ...).
not really. the problem was that he was asking about what he thought was the correct means to an ill-defined end, so when I pointed out the whole "ur doin it rong" aspect of it, he had to change his question.
@ThomasPornin He could, if he was smoking a whole bunch of crack ;) </java_hate>
well, it's the typical automatic response to anyone saying anything about crypto algorithms (hell, Poly said this about a different question just an hour ago), some people might forget that there ARE those who DO have to implement them.
Why do vendors insist on stating "The world's only <some generic X>", when I just looked at 4 other sites that stated the same damn thing?
rather, I guess I should say "vendors' marketing teams".
Don't their product managers survey the market occasionally? Like, maybe look at the first page of results on a simple Google search for the terms you claim you're the only one to provide?
well, this makes it easier: when looking for candidates for anything identity- or SSO- related, if they prominently display a login box with no SSL, a quick CLOSE TAB is a no-brainer.
should have been... but I kept reading one more page. Now my head hurts.
So, maybe it's just too early for me to be reading, but this seems a bit bogus. Anyone care to comment?
> The Classless Inter Domain Routing (CIDR) notation 135.8.55.8/24 is incorrect because it contains an incorrect network mask (/24). A CIDR notation of 135.8.55.8/29 would be correct.
I have a feeling one of us is being pedantic here and I'm wondering which one.
So with the /29 then 135.8.55.8 is the address of the network, and with /24 then 135.8.55.0 would be. However, 135.8.55.8/24 and 135.8.55.0/24 are functionally equivalent (albeit with 0/24 being the preferred).
Which is why I'm suspecting pedantry on someone's part.
Related: How can I enable domain authentication over wireless in Windows 7/2k8?
To test the domain login over wireless connection feature I'm trying to set up in the above question, I need an account that hasn't had its domain credentials cached on the local system. Unfortunately, there's only...
was more worried about providing service credentials to any random website :)
@RoryAlsop my first impression was that it was a clueless also-ran. The more I looked into it, the more they're leading my list of initial candidates.
Symplified just barely edged past them, based more on reputation and reputableness.
when I couldnt find anything decent for a while (took some googlefu, believe it or not), was shocked at the lack, then started thinking about a new idea for a startup...
both relieved and disappointed that there ARE some good solutions out there.
@AviD @Polynomial yeah Ruby has a couple of good ORMs for this kind of thing, ActiveRecord is probably the best known. Very handy for exposing databases to code but does introduce some security issues with default automatic mapping of all columns to the objects
Wow. There is apparently no way to ultimately force a tie-breaker in the presidential election with these numbers: 538 members of the electoral college, 50 states represented in the House, and 100 members in the Senate. In the case of the ultimate uber-tie, the Speaker of the House gets the presidency until the House and/or Senate can make up their mind.
@ScottPack Seen that video yet? Apparently, in cases of a presidential election tie at the electoral college, the VP gets chosen by the Senate - it may or may not necessarily be the same VP that ran with the chosen presidential candidate.
Some states give all their votes to the winner, some states divide up their votes according to the results, some states require their votes to vote according to the wishes of the state, some don't.
A great point in the last video there, at about 4:19 - "How you can become President with only twenty-two percent of the popular vote by taking advantage of the Electoral College today!".
Help! The only way that Chrome allows userscripts to be installed now is by downloading the file to my local system then dragging and dropping it into the extension manager interface. However when I try to drag it over, nothing happens!
I've tried using the file managers in both Gnome and KDE en...
even before I pulled the plug, it was leaking memory, I had to reboot it every couple of weeks, then twice a week in the last days
they seem to leak differently: Chrome dislikes opening and closing a lot of tabs, Firefox dislikes following a lot of links in the same tab
with Iceweasel 10, I noticed a leak when reading webcomics (lots of clicking “next” in the same tab): after hundreds of pages, switching between tabs would get slower, even if I closed the tab with a long history
I've switched to FF 15, haven't much experience with it yet
One annoying thing with FF is that you have to reboot it to install or upgrade most extensions
also, it is slower than FF for most rendering
and it crashes on the occasional website
so does chrome but at least only the tab goes snap
ObSecurity: niap-ccevs.org hard-freezes my Firefox 14 under Windows at work
With FF 15 under Linux with a blank profile, it freezes for a bit, then I get a message about a runaway script
@AviD I think she installed it on her own on at least one computer. Which would make it strictly more than she's ever installed Windows on her own. I know she's done several version upgrades on her own
(if you compare comparable things. Not if you set a preinstalled Windows against a Linux that you have to install on your own on unsupported hardware.)
I have a huge problem. In a nut shell, 2 days ago I noted a strange process going on with httpd, something I never saw before. That then led to me googling it, and OVH came up top with "Examples of a hacked server" So I freaked out, but didn't do anything as the rest of cpanel forums said it wasn...
@JeffFerland I looked through the site to find a dup. couldn't find any that were close to the question. I posted the bullets to "hopefully" craft the best possible answer.
Proposed Q&A site for proposed Q&A site for humans seeking help with removing malicious software, anti-virus support, and other malware/infection-related help. Malware.SE is not confined to computer-related-only malware/infection help.
Proposal: Malware
Discussions on malwares are not off-topic on security.SE. The malware tag has a 100+ questions. I feel this proposal's topics would be happily covered in that site, and a new proposal would just divert traffic from it.
We have a proposal, Computer Security Hacking, that passed the definition phase and is now in the committment phase. It has 26% of the required committment needed in only 30 days.
If we stay focused on building a community, we could have a site in beta by 2013, give or take a few months dependin...
@Gilles My stance has been that it is different because that can focus more on skiddish/blackhat topics. After some time thou, I've come to believe it is a dup.
@DigitalFire blackhat isn't a topic, it's a hat color
blackhats and whitehats have the same questions
they might ask it in different ways, but “how can I make this attack work” and “how can I prevent this attack from working” are fundamentally the same question
@DigitalFire not really, and the downshooters get shot down too
we had discussions on meta about this a month or two back
it turned out that while there used to be some vague anti-black-hat language in the FAQ, that had never been supported by any popular opinion on meta
questions from a black hat perspective get the occasional antagonistic comment and assorted close votes, but the community predominantly accepts these questions. There's no policy against them, and any vote to close as off-topic based merely on blackhatness would be invalid
Hmmm... Well i guess sometime later this week ill test that theory out. I have a few "black" questions that i've written down but never posted due to this very discussion.
Again, I will test this theory out as I have a few interesting questions to purpose. Hopefully my 100% question acceptance wont be tainted by them. lol