• @Xephonian@retrolemmy.com
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    14 days ago

    This ‘encrypt’ everything is such a waste of CPU and energy. Plus “oops, all your files are gone, tee hee.” HTTPS everywhere is fucking stupid. More complexity for zero benefit.

    • @mlg@lemmy.world
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      -12 days ago

      Hey guys I found the dude who complained the github didn’t come in EXE form lmao

        • Possibly linuxOP
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          1814 days ago

          Yes, everything needs to be https. https prevents tapering with traffic.

          • @Xephonian@retrolemmy.com
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            -1014 days ago

            You think your data is secure with HTTPS? There’s always an undisclosed vulnerability somewhere.

            Patches solve specific issues but they do nothing for overall security.

            • Possibly linuxOP
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              714 days ago

              I don’t think there is any vulnerability in https. There are know limitations but https itself is fine. If you are talking about TLS vulnerabilities then we have much more to worry about. To compromise the content on a page someone would have to brute force TLS very fast which isn’t feasible with today’s computer. Today’s computer would take at least a few million years. But I have scene estimates that say long past the heat death of the universe.

              Even if https was full of holes it still would be better than http. Http has zero tamper protections or encryption. Companies like AT&T used to tamper with traffic to various purposes and it was feasible for them to do so.

                • Possibly linuxOP
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                  14 days ago

                  TLS could be the most flawed system on Earth and it would still be better than no TLS. Plain traffic is just that, plain. I can do whatever I want to your web browser as I can arbitrarily change the contents of websites. I can make a page be full of ads or do more malicious things such as replacing a page with a phishing site or running something like beef which allows me to have full control of a browser and to pull all information. I could also exploit any vulnerabilities in the browser to do privilege escalation although to be fair major security CVEs are rare.

                  This is literally a community about privacy. I don’t understand why you wouldn’t want https. It works out of the box and it is implemented pretty much everywhere. If a site doesn’t use it that site isn’t really worth using as it take very little time to setup with Let’s encrypt.

              • @Xephonian@retrolemmy.com
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                14 days ago

                Oh look, we’ve found a security ‘researcher’. Mad that your job only consists of making other people’s job harder?

                Try the DMV, that’s also a great place to work where you can inflict misery on others.

                Valuable zero days aren’t exposed. They’re sold. If someone wants your data they will get it. HTTPS means nothing except huge amounts of wasted CPU cycles and energy.

            • Doubletwist
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              213 days ago

              Once again you seem to be calling for not bothering with any security effort of there’s even a remote chance of some other vulnerability happening.

              The whole point of security is that it’s always a multi-layered thing. Nobody sane is pretending that encrypting web traffic with HTTPS is a panacea that’s going to solve all your data security needs. But it is sure as hell a million times better than having all of your data transmitted in the clear, with absolutely no assurance that you’re are talking to the system you think you’re talking to, or that the data hasn’t been tampered with in transit.

              And don’t pretend https is a huge burden. It’s dead simple to get SSL/TLS certs, and the additional load of encrypting and decrypting the traffic is barely even a rounding error on modern CPUs.

    • Doubletwist
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      1414 days ago

      You know how I know you don’t know anything about security or computing?

      • @Xephonian@retrolemmy.com
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        -1214 days ago

        Because I have reasonable views about security drawbacks? That when I see a vulnerability, I also look at the whole situation and decide if that’s an acceptable risk, rather than screaming “Security issue!” at the top of my lungs and pretending that patching this one vulnerability somehow makes a difference when there’s always another found the next week??

        Security isn’t free, it costs us by making it harder to get work done. “Security researchers” only know how to cover their ass. I can do that without their shrieking cries of wolf.

        • ditty
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          1414 days ago

          "Might as well not bother patching this actively-exploited security vulnerability, there’ll just be another one in the future, " LMAO

          • @Ziglin@lemmy.world
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            -114 days ago

            On a laptop you bring everywhere I think it’s ok if you seriously think somebody might try to steal your data. On a desktop computer with the drive screwed onto the motherboard who’s going to steal it?

        • Possibly linuxOP
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          14 days ago

          Once with a strong hash and random password is enough. (Assuming luks2)

            • Possibly linuxOP
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              214 days ago

              Computers are always getting faster so it always necessary to stay well ahead of the curve. The big shift recently was the that the default hash switched to defend against massive GPU farms. The modern hash requires a lot more memory but as AI pushes memory to increase we are now potentially seeing machines that can break the hash. To my knowledge that is theoretical and would require a significant amount of hardware but never underestimate the budget of the government.