148800+ entries in 1.216s

bad_duck: danielpbarron: anyway
I want some more data so
I'm looking for someone who is listening the network for a long time / has logs
bad_duck: danielpbarron: yes,
I have this info in my debug.log but my node is only running for 1-2 months...
bad_duck: danielpbarron | data signed by WoT members <--
I hope to find a "relyable" person, but yes
I'll have to trust him
trinque: do
I understand correctly that you use a "signing key" to sign your various subkeys, thus associating them with one identity?
mircea_popescu: for some reason
i was thinking you're doing rabin-miller
Apocalyptic: after 430 runs the probability of error is something like 1/e if
I remember and if this doc is correct
Apocalyptic:
I will post a report if it leads to something, or if somebody wants it
Apocalyptic:
I guess
i'm gonna have to keep increasing it for a while
Apocalyptic:
I suppose it's the same as the master one though, so this situation can't happen since e is itself a prime
Apocalyptic: asciilifeform, somehow pgpdump refuses to print info about the invalid subkey, or at least
I don't see the keyid referenced the way
I see it for the master key and the signature packets
jurov:
i stand corrected, it's not this one
jurov: but if
i'm ever getting into such uber-illegal territory,
i'm not advertising it here
jurov:
i guess it's a device osmocom-gsm hackers use
Apocalyptic:
I guess maybe e isn't even prime with phi(N) on those
Apocalyptic: well given what
i've tried on that HPA's
i would not fully concur here
fluffypony: yeah
I know, but neither of us are terribly au fait with it, so we'll just dip our toe in;)
fluffypony:
I need to tweak the presentation a bit, so the wife will go to the spa for a couple of hours
trinque: ah yeah
I guess it's bad at concurrent writes; that's fair
trinque: sure,
I am saying
I've personally never found sqlite3 to be slow
trinque:
I wonder if anyone ever tests this hypothesis
Hasimir:
I recognise most of the names
Hasimir: and v2 keys == pgp 2.3 to pgp 2.6(
i)
ascii_field:
i will be very surprised when a 'proper' pubkey that some fella actually has on his own box, fails the test
ascii_field: Hasimir: so far each of the cases
i have examined in detail had -at least one- legit rsa modulus in subkeys
Hasimir: ok, let me see if
I'm reading the article correctly
Apocalyptic: <mircea_popescu> Apocalyptic finding a small factor is not inherently breaking a specially crafted key that was made to have that one small factor, yes. // this is all
i was arguing :)
Apocalyptic:
i'm just trying to show that finding a small factor is not inherently breaking the key
Apocalyptic:
I submit it to phuctor, its screams "Moduli factored !"
Apocalyptic:
I multiply then the modulus N by 3 (or any other small prime, the value doesn't matter)
☟︎ Apocalyptic: let's say
I take the two secret primes of my present key
ascii_field: at the moment,
i would like to collect a sample of material signed with one of the -legit- keys for which a 'magic' key exists
Apocalyptic: ascii_field, ok, would love to compare the results when you're done,
i'm throwing some stuff at it atm
Apocalyptic: anyway mircea it was just to say that in this case
I would call it factor only if modulus is totally broken into primes, something
i've referred as full factoring, otherwise not much you can do
ascii_field:
i.e., likely to be pollard-rho-able and/or lenstra-able.
Apocalyptic:
i'm just commenting on the first invalid subkey that was discussed
Apocalyptic:
I mean you can get a standard 4096-bit sane RSA key, multiply N by 3 and there you go
Landgull: Oh, thank you.
I don't really have anything to say, though,
I'm here to listen.
ben_vulpes: <davout>
i'm afraid if
i try on an ec2 box
i'll accidentally break the internet << "we can therefore we must"
davout:
i'm afraid if
i try on an ec2 box
i'll accidentally break the internet
davout: can someone explain to me how
i'm able to malloc into existence more than 1tb, fill the first byte with some random int, and have valgrind report the massive allocated space. all this with a whopping 4gb ram and 512gb hdd?
mircea_popescu: bitstein honestly, the blowing up of the entire "car dealers" bs is pretty much the only thing
i actually like about mr tesla.
jurov:
i heard f35 cannot transition from hover to forward movement
☟︎ mike_c:
I have 2nd. 20th anniversary looks like just a PR thing? not different content?
mike_c: davout:gonna get the schneier one to get started << mod6 told me to read this, it is awesome.
I feel stupid for not having read it sooner.
ascii_field: (and
i'm still at a loss to craft a situation where gpg's p and q will occupy varying number of 'limbs' and lead to catastrophe in the given line)
mats: osprey's not doing so good so
i guess they decided to experiment more with f-35.
mircea_popescu: maybe
i miss something, but why do you want a plane to helicopter ?
mike_c: depends what you consider the thing.
I mean, an "F35" exists, and some things on it work..
mircea_popescu: dude,
i remember the time back in 2012 when the pressure cooker wasn't on yet and all sorts of people didn't appear retarded.
Hasimir:
I returned to playing in order to make a good habit of it by the time senility struck in order to stave it off ... then discovered that years of IT logic paid off in unexpected ways
ascii_field: 'how to airgap, practical guide'
i think it was.
Hasimir: though it it turns out to be the "you must all use openpgp cards" crowd
I will laugh and laugh ...
assbot: Logged on 20-05-2015 01:19:10; asciilifeform: ben_vulpes: so
i walk into $redacted on monday and folks compare me to pons & fleischmann. so there'll be teasing, yes.
Hasimir: it's currently in a branch of git.gnupg.org/gpgme (to be merged with master when
I finish cleaning up the last of the ancient examples)
Hasimir:
I ported the python bindings for gpgme to py3
Hasimir: hmm, oh ratings ...
I tend not to rate bots, not even mine
danielpbarron:
I noticed you've got a +4 in my L2 and a 0 in assbot's
Hasimir: well, whatever floats his boat
I guess
mod6: ahh,
i see, you gotta pick the bases for a randomly.
mod6: oh it might actually do this somewhere anyway... there are some references in the docs... although
i haven't found it in the code yet.
mod6: by the end of the night
i was digging into prime selection. gnupg does fast fermat checks in several places, but im starting to wonder if it wouldn't also be benificial to just check against a list of "Carmichael numbers"
mod6: <+mircea_popescu> maybe
i wanna use e = 2686977, whose business is it. <<
i was looking at this yesterday too, had the same impression. mpi_set_ui( e, 65537);
mircea_popescu:
http://log.bitcoin-assets.com/?date=20-05-2015#1139680 << speaking of this, am
I the only one nonplussed by all this "we use <<best practices>> fixed exponent" bs ? it's an unavoidalbe magic number , okay, but it's tyhe sort that should eminently be a knob for the user. a proper gpg would have e user-settable at the key generation phase (with 65536+1 as a default, sure)
☝︎☟︎ Helvetik: Sorry,
I juste speak a little english.
I'm here for to talk with davout
assbot: Logged on 19-05-2015 22:45:37; trinque:
I'll negrate people who abuse it
mircea_popescu: instead of parading them naked through the streets with a "
i was a fucktard and am now sorry" thing around their neck, they let them sit around for twenty years coming up with reasons as to how their idiocy "wasn't really all that bad".
☟︎ mircea_popescu:
i have no fucking idea what west germany was thinking when it allowed the scumbags to join civilisation without first hanging every "intellectual" of the eastern school.
assbot: Logged on 19-05-2015 19:21:04; decimation: mircea seems to credit the german geography for why 'nordic freedom' 'seems to work'. but
I suggest it is the people themselves - having been beaten by the romans for centuries, and then forced by the church to mate outside their immediate family, they developed a concept of 'kinship' beyond L2 cousins