Timeline for libvisualid list by rozzin, page 96
rozzin
libvisualid
Thursday, 29-Nov-0001 19:00:00 EST
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Trying to resist the urge to put way too much info on my #businesscard. Failing....
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Looking for #businesscard examples that include email + social addresses + OpenPGP fingerprint. Trying to design for !libreplanet meetups...
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It's not even about "understanding so little about science"; I'm impressed that people can't even remember their (or their kids') childhood.
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Yeah, had to say to someone the other day: you grew up here, don't you remember EVERY WINTER being cold when you were a kid?
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Getting a little tired of the "Huh huh, so much for global warming" jokes. Hard to believe people understand so little about science.
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It's interesting to look back at the progression of which browser teams were easy/hard to work with: http://status.hackerposse.com/url/6783 http://status.hackerposse.com/url/6784 http://status.hackerposse.com/url/6785 http://status.hackerposse.com/url/6786
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I remember when #Mozilla was #Debian's #problem-child...: https://www.debian.org/releases/lenny/amd64/release-notes/ch-information.en.html#mozilla-security
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!TIL: Chromium-Browser in Debian Wheezy has reached end of life. – https://www.debian.org/security/2015/dsa-3148
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!APF Needs a logo....
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@rozzin The vendors' main argument was legal compliance.
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@lnxw48, that's #disturbing. What's the rationale for coffee-shops #MITM'ing their clientele, anyway?
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@der @bobjonkman Not just your employer's computer. I used to get catalogs of MITM appliances sent to me at work. The vendors were targeting chains of #coffee shops and eateries that offered #WiFi access. I suspect you're being MITM'd every time you use Internet at a hotel, too.
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I've heard corporate IT types say "the fundamental underlying problem" with #endtoend !security is that it's secure end-to-end: http://www.cisco.com/web/about/ac123/ac147/archived_issues/ipj_12-3/123_security.html
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MITM cert software is all too common. There's a whole ecosystem of vendors selling MITM "solutions" to corporations. And since nobody ever checks the cert details when they're browsing with https, nobody realizes they've been compromised. Never do your banking from your employer's computer! The whole hierarchical PKI of certs, CAs and browsers is completely broken. !surveillance !security
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It's interesting that #browsers will copy invisible stuff at the same time they won't copy visible :before and :after data inserted by #CSS.
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@lnxw48, this reminds me of a rule I once encountered about 'safe' image-formats for exporting data: #PNG is dangerous because the orthogonal alpha channel means pixels can contain invisible (recoverable) data; #GIF is safe because transparent pixels contain only the transparency. !security
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Oh, #browsers, you are so "special"....