$argon2id$v=19$m=512,t=256,p=1$wCQYS+4N8q5iKLigIZ22gQ$V/fqDkL++GTiMe0Acyk1RbjNr7loyJlppLecbNk93ec
- 5 Posts
- 21 Comments
25btc is currently worth $1,717,852
Are those some non-metric kilometres I don’t know about?
irq0@infosec.pubto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Finally implemented encryption in Jotty <3English
6·3 months agoI appreciate you taking the time to implement this and answering some questions! I have a follow up question- What’s the benefit of using asymmetric encryption here? You’re not signing the message ( you probably should imo ) and you don’t appear to support sharing encrypted notes ( i.e a user provides one or more additional public keys that a note is encrypted for ). You’re basically doing symmetric encryption with the pain of key management
It’d be simpler ( from a user and code perspective )to use symmetric encryption ( something like aes-256-gcm or ChaCha20-Poly1305 for example ) and use key wrapping to avoid encrypting user data directly and you’d have stronger crypto as a result
You’re right that PGP is a valid encryption method but it’s not very popular in the modern day because it’s very hard to get right. Latacora has a great post on the PGP Problemand the Soatok blogs that u/litchralee linked are well worth a read too
irq0@infosec.pubto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why do so many put their resources in AWS us-east-1 when that's the only one (that I'm aware of) that has ever gone down?
5·5 months agoI believe us-east-1 is the default region so it’s probably a case of devs not changing their region unless they need to.
Also, 1000s of companies use AWS. In issue in any of their regions is likely to have significant impact on internet services
A shoe horn is still a better spoon than option 3
She’s welcome to chose spoon 1
1 - I don’t want my spoons to be ribbed for her pleasure
2 - This spoon is simply incorrect
3 - This is the most disgusting thing I’ve ever seen
I’ll choose option 4, its the least offensive option, but I’m not happy about it
irq0@infosec.pubto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Rethinking networking stack - recommendations?English
1·6 months agoI used to run PFSense ( pretty much the same as Opensense ) and really liked it but moved over to Ubiquity in the last year or so. Here’s my 2 cents…
Go with Ubiquity if you want a single unified interface for managing all your devices. You’ll have “soft vendor lock in”, their kit will work just fine with a mix of hardware but it’s best if everything is Ubiquity
Go with Opensense if you want complete flexibility in the kit you’re using. I feel likeI had more fine grained control with PFSense than I do with Ubiquity but I think that’s a symptom of how the UI/UX rather than the features
You can do the same stuff with both options. I’m very happy with my Ubiquity set up, I don’t see myself changing anything anytime soon
irq0@infosec.pubto
Actually Infuriating@lemmy.world•Nick Clegg says asking artists for use permission would ‘kill’ the AI industry
20·10 months agoYou’re saying that like it’s a bad thing?
irq0@infosec.pubto
networking@sh.itjust.works•enterprise wifi auth and 47-day TLS certsEnglish
4·10 months agoThe CAB Forum only govern public CAs and certificates and the use of certs on the public internet. Your private PKI will be unaffected by the new changes. On top of that the change will be introduced gradually, the first reduction is in March 2026 and will limit certs issued after March 2026 to 200 days so even if you saw some impact for some reason you’d still have a couple of months to put a fix in place
Freshman need to accept the cert once (hopefully after checking the fingerprint)
Nobody is checking the fingerprint, nobody
Mr President there’s been a second signal chat

Take it as a ranty blog interspaced with some furry art.
You can just ignore the furry art if it’s not your style because helpfully all of the important content is in the text.
Soatok links to the same Latacora blog on the first line and says that they’re only really going to reword what’s said there.
I’m not here to litigate the demerits of PGP. The Latacora article I linked above makes the same arguments I would make today, and is a more entertaining read.
PGP/GPG maintainers have had many years to fix the problems that have been identified but they haven’t. Is it safe when used “properly”? Yes! It’s absolutely safe when used properly but the problem is it’s hard to use full stop.
I’m not saying modern solutions are perfect, because they’re not but the alternates that Latacora ( and Soatok ) suggest are better. Do you want to encrypt a file? Use age. Use minisign/signify for signing. They do do one thing and do it well. Signal is easy to use and sorts all of the key management for you. Most people don’t know what a private key is. They just know they want encrypted messaging because of the NSA or Snowden or whatever his name was on the news, they can’t remember and they don’t really care.
PGP has legitimate use cases but the vast majority of people don’t have those cases and should just use Signal. Signal and the Signal protocol is the centralised tool you’re looking for.
irq0@infosec.pubto
NonCredibleDefense@sh.itjust.works•When the marketing department at Rheinmetal know their audience can’t contain themselvesEnglish
0·2 years agoThe condom seems a bit ambitious for your average Gamescon attendee
irq0@infosec.pubtoMicroblog Memes@lemmy.world•Whoever invented the eight hour five day work week is Satan.English
0·2 years agoThe idea came from a British guy called Robert Owen in the 19th century. It was a huge step forward in workers rights seeing as it was fairly normal for factories to work from sunrise to sunset to try and maximise their output.
Typical working hours were 10-18 hrs a day 6 to 7 days a week
I’m not saying I love working 8hrs a day and modern society can definitely do better but this was a positive step forward in history and should be celebrated… celebrated isn’t quite the right word but I hope you get what I mean
irq0@infosec.pubto
World News@lemmy.world•16-year-old killers of transgender teenager in England sentenced for 'sadistic' murderEnglish
33·2 years agoThe 20 years is the minimum time they’ll do in prison.
After the 20 years they’ll be eligible for parole. If, and only if, the board decides that it’s safe for them to be released will they do so.
If they are released they will be in license. This means they are subject to prison recall without trial should they pose any risk to the public. The license may also impose additional restrictions such as regular therapy appointments, restrictions on leaving the country etc. These conditions will be imposed for life. Breaking any of these restrictions would also result in a recall to prison.
If the parole board decides that it’s not safe to release them, then they’ll remain in prison. They may very well remain in prison for their entire life.










You’re right, the tap water isn’t completely sterile and still has some contaminants but it’s nothing to be super concerned about if you’re not regularly shitting yourself after drinking tap water everything is fine
You definitely want some contamination in the form of minerals as they give your water its taste. You can buy a fairly cheap “TDS” meter online which will show you the Total Dissolved Solids. This won’t give you a complete picture of what’s there but will let you know if your water is more or less "minerally " ( I.e soft or hard )
Outside of that you can look into getting an ICP test which will give you a break down of the exact minerals in your water, depending on the brand they may also test for bacteria but most don’t. The ICP still won’t pick up on other contamination like PFAS but they’re incredibly difficult to remove anyway so it’s best not to think about them…
You can also look into installing an RO-DI system which will filter out minerals and other organic compounds like ammonia etc but it won’t do anything for bacteria or PFAS. You shouldn’t regularly drink de-ionised water though as it strips the minerals out of your body ( like the calcium from your bones ) so you’d have to re-mineralise it.
Your water is totally fine and safe, don’t overthink it!