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5 votes
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Big Tech firms march to the beat of Pentagon, CIA despite dissension
4 votes -
What is you preferred password manager?
I use Lastpass at work but don't have experience with any others. Last time I looked into it Lastpass and Keepass were the only two viable options if I recall (though my memory isn't the most...
I use Lastpass at work but don't have experience with any others. Last time I looked into it Lastpass and Keepass were the only two viable options if I recall (though my memory isn't the most reliable thing). A few quick searches seem to indicate that the market has opened up a bit since then. I'd like to use something open source with Linux, Windows, and Android clients. So, what's your preferred password manager and why?
45 votes -
A sobering look at fake online reviews
11 votes -
Requiring users to use passphrase instead of passwords
Hey guys -- I wrote a blog that I'd love some feedback on. I'm an identity product manager and have been trying to train my users to use passphrases. Do these read friendly enough? I want it to be...
Hey guys -- I wrote a blog that I'd love some feedback on. I'm an identity product manager and have been trying to train my users to use passphrases. Do these read friendly enough? I want it to be readable by all users, but my target audience is other people in product and software.
https://medium.com/@toritxtornado/training-your-users-to-use-passphrases-2a42fd69e141
12 votes -
Side-channel attacking browsers through CSS3 features
8 votes -
Given Tilde's dedication to user security and privacy, it would be awesome if we could use GPG encryption in PMs.
This is of course already possible with base 64 encoding and some work on the user's side, but adding the ability to encrypt messages as a native feature would better encourage this as a security...
This is of course already possible with base 64 encoding and some work on the user's side, but adding the ability to encrypt messages as a native feature would better encourage this as a security measure. This is a standard feature on a lot of darknet markets. Tildes could allow users to upload a public GPG key. Then a private key could be held entirely client-side in session storage to be used by JavaScript.
This feature would probably add too much complexity to the site's simplistic front end. But I'd be interested to have a discussion on the pros/cons.
5 votes -
Lobotomizing GNOME
9 votes -
FBI: Kindly reboot your router now, please
12 votes -
Password reset
I don't need to reset my password, and I really appreciate the way that it is done to maximize anonymity. However, I think there is a bit of a problem with how it is done in terms of users getting...
I don't need to reset my password, and I really appreciate the way that it is done to maximize anonymity. However, I think there is a bit of a problem with how it is done in terms of users getting locked out.
If you're locked out, as far as I can tell, there is no way to view the email hint associated with your account. It seems a bit counter intuitive to me that in order to see the hint for how to regain access to your account, you have to already have that access! I also think that it won't work in the case that someone has been away for a few months and has forgotten their password. I'm not sure what a good way of displaying the hint would be, however, since if it is done by username anyone who has seen your posts can look at your password hint.
Hopefully with a bit of discussion we can cook something up that can solve this catch 22!
11 votes -
Security flaws / bounties
Hi! Something I've been wondering, is Tilde planned to eventually have a bug bounty program or something like that for security flaws in the future? Edit: RIP, forgot to separate those tags with...
Hi! Something I've been wondering, is Tilde planned to eventually have a bug bounty program or something like that for security flaws in the future?
Edit: RIP, forgot to separate those tags with commas...
7 votes -
An oral history of the l0pht
9 votes -
Security vulnerabilities on some BMWs could allow remote access
6 votes -
An analysis of Cloudflare's email address obfuscation
5 votes -
Memes that kill: The future of information warfare
7 votes -
Speculative Store Bypass explained: what it is, how it works (new variant of CPU speculative-execution exploit)
4 votes -
18 year old Uruguayan student awarded $36,000 for uncovering RCE vulnerability in Google App Engine
8 votes -
A little thing that might form some trouble (phising)
As can be seen in this post in ~test it is possible to secretly refer to another webpage than the one actually typed. It's not the biggest priority as of now, but it would be nice to see this...
As can be seen in this post in ~test it is possible to secretly refer to another webpage than the one actually typed. It's not the biggest priority as of now, but it would be nice to see this fixed before Tildes will go live.
In case the ~test post gets deleted, here's an example:
https://innocent.site/7 votes -
Gina Haspel confirmed as CIA chief despite scrutiny of her role in interrogation program
3 votes -
Google YOLO clickjacking
5 votes -
Researchers have found methods of sending secret audio instructions undetectable to the human ear to Apple's Siri, Amazon's Alexa and Google's Assistant
6 votes -
Warrant Canary
Hey, Just a thought. I'm not sure what the legal standing of warrant canaries (i.e. being compelled to lie) are in Canada, but given the privacy level afforded by the site the key component to...
Hey, Just a thought. I'm not sure what the legal standing of warrant canaries (i.e. being compelled to lie) are in Canada, but given the privacy level afforded by the site the key component to that privacy is trust.
You're doing a lot to make sure private data is treated as harmful, and with the open source code being visible, but that's still not a guarantee that the server is actually running the code that will be open sourced.
Tildes could probably benefit from a warrant canary given that it's a platform for user generated content and if it gets prominent enough it may be subject to LEO scrutiny. Compliance with LEO is a given since the website operates under Canadian Jurisdiction, but given the... nature of some requests (Gag Orders / Etc...) a canary could be a privacy positive move for users of Tildes.
7 votes -
Twitter was logging users' passwords in plaintext - no evidence of misuse, but suggests all users change their password
11 votes -
There is no middle ground on encryption
5 votes