Having studied this for many hours now... and also having read part of that dissertation... and knowing something about block ciphers... I don't think it is probable that any peer will want to know the order of the…
Can you explain why it is neccesary or functional that "one side of the protocol can send large messages, and the counterparty can reply with smaller ones, relying on the fact that the message includes discardable…
It is wholly inappropriate to start blaming these authors, or to even suggest they are malicious (which is even worse). They are the ones the technical computer community that operates at this level of network…
I have always detested C (also C++) because it's so unreadable... the snippets of code you cite are just so dense ie. a function like n2s() gives pretty much no indication of what it does to a casual reader. Just…
Having studied this for many hours now... and also having read part of that dissertation... and knowing something about block ciphers... I don't think it is probable that any peer will want to know the order of the…
Can you explain why it is neccesary or functional that "one side of the protocol can send large messages, and the counterparty can reply with smaller ones, relying on the fact that the message includes discardable…
It is wholly inappropriate to start blaming these authors, or to even suggest they are malicious (which is even worse). They are the ones the technical computer community that operates at this level of network…
I have always detested C (also C++) because it's so unreadable... the snippets of code you cite are just so dense ie. a function like n2s() gives pretty much no indication of what it does to a casual reader. Just…