You should fix that error message too, it's pretty awful.
A fun edge case is that .au domains are not registrable by any entity, except for the ones that exist just because. http://csiro.au/
That's been fairly clear from the start. Almost anything actually useful needs an oracle, and then you get back to the problem of wait, didn't Bitcoin already solve this problem half a decade ago? Once you get past the…
> DEFINITELY NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE: Personally, I think $2.80/0.01 XBT is low and I would not be in a rush to sell at this price. But, I do understand if you're bearish and you wanted to dump in to the bulls ahead of…
Just giving the benefit of the doubt here, a lot of the time it's unclear if your disclosure even made it to the right people in a company or not. No response is the norm for security disclosures, as is claims of "we…
Why is their target 8 seconds to load the page? That's a ridiculously long time.
Why would it be corrupted? Just because it contains a malicious payload doesn't mean it has to be unviewable normally. Could even just tack onto all outgoing MMS by default and never raise anybodies suspicions.
Probably has engineering challenges past what you would normally face, which thankfully makes a 1B device botnet a little unrealistic. I can't imagine how you'd even begin to control such a thing, just a sequential…
Slightly exaggerated, but that sort of thing absolutely happens.
On a statistical side almost anything else is likely to kill you. There's probably more people killed each year by ladders than some perceived external threat, and I don't see a war on ladders happening anywhere.
To me that sounds like no trust at all.
What is this blind obsession with "THIS NEEDS A BLOCKCHAIN!!!!!!!"? There's nothing, absolutely nothing, in a system of storing playlists which needs decentralized canonical ordering. A blockchain is literally one of…
Would be amusing to program the RFID in someone's dog to open the front door though, necessitating picking up a German Shepard to hold it up to a reader. Better still make the dog a spare key and nobody would ever…
The Apple store wifi is also on the default trust list.
Hacker News loads in milliseconds, why does this take over 10 seconds to even start showing comments? It's not so much a showcase as a reason to ever never use this in any product, it's obviously unsuitable for…
Signing is slow, if anything signing the CSRF tokens just became your bottleneck, if not you just inflated the request size by kilobytes for no good reason.
I was very amused to realise that it was actually cheaper for me to buy a RFID ticket, run it into the debt limit of $1 and then dispose of it at the end of the trip. Talking to the station staff about it they…
Is it really possible from an evil standpoint to get SMS rerouted to another number? I was looking into that a while ago (I wanted a prettier number, but didn't want to lose things associated with the old one) and the…
Have a Unicode bullet point, on the house. •
With systems like this in place do you really believe anonymity is even an achievable goal?
I'm mostly concerned about experimenting straying into "reverse engineering".
I wouldn't really call this spying, it's pretty necessary for Google to do some human verification of the content they are selling advertising amongst. I'd be more surprised to find out that they weren't reviewing…
Presumably you can get around the "proximity" limit by just using a more powerful transmitter, I can't imagine they have any actual near field communication or anything.
There are a lot of LEDs that have controllers embedded like the WS2812.
> Are they trying to pen themselves into a corner where the entire world ends up standing against them? http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org/media/50646/us_vs_world.gif There's not many outcomes to that scenario if you look…
You should fix that error message too, it's pretty awful.
A fun edge case is that .au domains are not registrable by any entity, except for the ones that exist just because. http://csiro.au/
That's been fairly clear from the start. Almost anything actually useful needs an oracle, and then you get back to the problem of wait, didn't Bitcoin already solve this problem half a decade ago? Once you get past the…
> DEFINITELY NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE: Personally, I think $2.80/0.01 XBT is low and I would not be in a rush to sell at this price. But, I do understand if you're bearish and you wanted to dump in to the bulls ahead of…
Just giving the benefit of the doubt here, a lot of the time it's unclear if your disclosure even made it to the right people in a company or not. No response is the norm for security disclosures, as is claims of "we…
Why is their target 8 seconds to load the page? That's a ridiculously long time.
Why would it be corrupted? Just because it contains a malicious payload doesn't mean it has to be unviewable normally. Could even just tack onto all outgoing MMS by default and never raise anybodies suspicions.
Probably has engineering challenges past what you would normally face, which thankfully makes a 1B device botnet a little unrealistic. I can't imagine how you'd even begin to control such a thing, just a sequential…
Slightly exaggerated, but that sort of thing absolutely happens.
On a statistical side almost anything else is likely to kill you. There's probably more people killed each year by ladders than some perceived external threat, and I don't see a war on ladders happening anywhere.
To me that sounds like no trust at all.
What is this blind obsession with "THIS NEEDS A BLOCKCHAIN!!!!!!!"? There's nothing, absolutely nothing, in a system of storing playlists which needs decentralized canonical ordering. A blockchain is literally one of…
Would be amusing to program the RFID in someone's dog to open the front door though, necessitating picking up a German Shepard to hold it up to a reader. Better still make the dog a spare key and nobody would ever…
The Apple store wifi is also on the default trust list.
Hacker News loads in milliseconds, why does this take over 10 seconds to even start showing comments? It's not so much a showcase as a reason to ever never use this in any product, it's obviously unsuitable for…
Signing is slow, if anything signing the CSRF tokens just became your bottleneck, if not you just inflated the request size by kilobytes for no good reason.
I was very amused to realise that it was actually cheaper for me to buy a RFID ticket, run it into the debt limit of $1 and then dispose of it at the end of the trip. Talking to the station staff about it they…
Is it really possible from an evil standpoint to get SMS rerouted to another number? I was looking into that a while ago (I wanted a prettier number, but didn't want to lose things associated with the old one) and the…
Have a Unicode bullet point, on the house. •
With systems like this in place do you really believe anonymity is even an achievable goal?
I'm mostly concerned about experimenting straying into "reverse engineering".
I wouldn't really call this spying, it's pretty necessary for Google to do some human verification of the content they are selling advertising amongst. I'd be more surprised to find out that they weren't reviewing…
Presumably you can get around the "proximity" limit by just using a more powerful transmitter, I can't imagine they have any actual near field communication or anything.
There are a lot of LEDs that have controllers embedded like the WS2812.
> Are they trying to pen themselves into a corner where the entire world ends up standing against them? http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org/media/50646/us_vs_world.gif There's not many outcomes to that scenario if you look…