Wow, TIL. My apologies.
Wow, TIL. My apologies.
Except Mozilla has declining revenues.
Possibly even less money in the future if the Google antitrust suit bars them from paying Mozilla to place their search engine first.
I understand what you’re saying, and that in the real world, bad security practices abound among average users who are likely to have passwords like “12345678” or “password”
But in this fictional scenario, my advice is directed at someone who has something valuable enough to protect behind a 121 character passphrase against a very determined adversary who has a Planck Cruncher at their disposal and is willing to run it for 100 years to crack that someone’s data.
A little extra security protocol might be worth the extra effort.
I can see how that would be unclear, and I apologize for the misunderstanding.
You’re describing the best case scenario for the person wishing to protect their password, where the Planck Cruncher guesses the password on the very last possible combination, taking 100 years to get there.
The Planck Cruncher might guess the password correctly on the first try, or it might guess correctly on the last possible combination in 100 years.
What we really want to measure are the odds of a random guess being correct.
The most “realistic” scenario is the Planck Cruncher guessing correctly somewhere between 0 and 100 years, but you want to adjust the length of the password to be secure against a powerful attack during the realistic life of whatever system you’re trying to protect.
On average, assuming the rate of password testing is constant, it’ll take the Planck Cruncher 50 years to guess the 121 character password.
And that assumes the password never changes.
If the password is changed while the Planck Cruncher is doing its thing, and it changes to something that the PC has already guessed and tested negative, the PC is screwed.
Hint: Change your password regularly.
edit: The user should change their password regularly during the attack.
Each password change reduces the risk of a lucky guess by that many years of PC attack.
In the episode, they also mention the Usui Pass Railway Heritage Park where you can actually drive their working EF63 electric locomotive!
As featured in anime TV series Yuru Camp S3, episode 10
You mean the special toothed tracks? Yeah, I couldn’t find a good photo with both the train and the tracks.
Featured in anime series Yuru Camp Season 3, episodes 3 and 4.
An absolutely fun series too
Sooo, who wants to develop the open source hookup app based on the Fediverse?
It’s fear of calcification. Lemmy is tiny, in terms of our user base.
If we don’t get fresh blood, and most importantly the rare active contributors, we’ll just get used to talking to each other, we’ll get bored or burned out and leave.
You’d be surprised.
I have a RL friend who’s on Reddit all the time, and he didn’t even hear about the shutdown, much less /r/place, or anything like lemmy. I’ve been trying to sell it to him…
Re: The “We’re elite” becomes “We’re bored talking among the same old people” or “We’re burned out”, leading to users leaving and formerly thriving communities dying.
I’ve been around long enough to see this happen on multiple forums.
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Or anything the devs can do to make it not look goofy.
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It’s part of the ol’ Big Tech playbook:
If a promising emerging competitor emerges:
Image rendering attacks and download tracking are well known, so it’s not paranoid at all.
I’m not sure how extensive the spam wave was, nor how quickly the user was able to create an account, make the comments.
I doubt that the quantity in that I came across would be enough to take down a server, but that may be the point: To test lemmy’s collective defenses and response without drawing too much attention.
A common IP address or address range ban file that’s frequently updated and downloaded by each instance might be another way to boost security.
If this is actually an org attack, I’m guessing that we’ll see botnet DDOS comment and post attacks next.
It looks like some kind of fix was implemented after my post, so I can’t replicate the problem for you.
Whenever I edit one of my cross-instance posts, the language defaults to English, and I can save my edits with no issues.
Now whether the fix was on an instance basis, i.e. config changes, or in some Lemmy-system update, I can’t tell you.
edit: Maybe my issue was solved along with the fix for the default languages: https://lemmy.ml/post/13410320
It’s different technology for throwing projectiles than gunpowder.
Airguns have less power in relation to their size, because they use mechanical energy (springs, pistons, pre-pressurized air) to use pressurized air for propulsion, but the ammo is much cheaper and lighter because the the propulsion doesn’t have to be built into the ammunition round itself, like a conventional firearm bullet contains gunpowder, which you can think of as chemical energy.
Airgun ammo just consists of the projectile itself: Usually solid metal pellets, slugs, and BBs. There are arrow shooting airguns too.
Adjustments to projectile force are performed on the airgun itself by adjusting springs and air pressure, as opposed to gunpowder guns, which are dependent on the gunpowder load in each round.
But the same ballistic calculations apply: Projectile weight, speed at muzzle exit, to calculate holdover at a distance.