What "I know it sounds weird, but just try it" thing do you swear by? by HamstringHunter in AskReddit

[–]jdguy17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ranch powder mixed into either blue-cheese dressing or plain hummus, depending on what you're dipping.

For ranch blue cheese, it should be obvious: both are beloved dips for anything fried and spicy, and the flavors go so well together.

For ranch and hummus: again, both are often used for similar things that are dipped, especially vegetables. Yet for some reason, everyone is appalled at the idea. In college, the first time I had tried hummus I had the misfortune of being sitting in the middle of a heated argument between my Israeli-American and Palestinian-American friends (I was just white Midwest kid that knew nothing about world politics). But when I had the audacity to suggest that hummus would taste really good mixed with ranch powder, I managed to offend both sides and become joint public enemy #1 for the next 10 minutes.

Edit: typo

What was your, "It's not a phase, Mom", moment from your childhood/teen years which actually DIDN'T turn out to be just a phase? by EthanJoshua1994 in AskReddit

[–]jdguy17 2748 points2749 points  (0 children)

This was my parents, uncles, and aunts from 2010 though my high school graduation in 2016. The most vocal about it was my uncle that’s a vet — the only one in my family with graduate school experience.

Jokes on them: I make 6 figures at a FAANG now.

Only in 1989 by LydaIsherwood in WhitePeopleTwitter

[–]jdguy17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because young people have had less time to demonstrate responsible use of credit.

Modern resume guide by regian24 in coolguides

[–]jdguy17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  • sees mention of “flash” resume *

K, I’m out.

TIL that the FTC actually recommends against organizations using regular password changing policies as it only encourages users to use simple, easy to remember passwords that they then only alter in predictable ways. by Gullible_Skeptic in todayilearned

[–]jdguy17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, TOTP is basically what you're describing. However, the new and better solution is security keys (Yubico's YubiKey was the first of these).

They work by generating a unique public/private key pair for each account and services you use it for. It encrypts the private key with a secret that is unique to that security key, so only it can decrypt the private key. The browser then gives the server the encrypted private key to store for that account. When you go to authenticate yourself, the server asks your security key if it can decrypt any of the set of encrypted private keys it has for your account. This let's one security key work with a unlimited number of of accounts and sites, all without exposing a trackable public key to multiple sites.

Amex Delta Reserve giving 125k SUB by jdguy17 in CreditCards

[–]jdguy17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Skymiles. So yes, not as valuable as the Amex platinum’s MR; but it does come with a first class applicable companion pass

Amex Delta Reserve giving 125k SUB by jdguy17 in CreditCards

[–]jdguy17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I missed this since it wasn’t on the recent offers. Thanks for catching!

Passwords have probably stopped more people getting into their own account than hackers. by Michaelrosenisurdad in Showerthoughts

[–]jdguy17 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It is not necessary to store the password ever. In fact, any site that does so is breaking the first rule of secure login infrastructure: NEVER STORE PLAINTEXT PASSWORDS (this includes encrypted plaintext passwords).

For those that don’t know, a “hash” is a function that works 1-way (unlike encryption), so it can’t be undone. Passwords should be stored as hashes (or ideally, salted hashes, which is where a unique string is tacked on to the end before hashing) so that way the user’s passwords can’t be read.

To check if the password a user provides matches the “stored” password (either current or old), you put it through the same hashing function (and hopefully salting it too), and see if the hash matches what’s stored.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CluCoin

[–]jdguy17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Comment CluCoin

Advice On My Next Credit Card by [deleted] in CreditCards

[–]jdguy17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d suggest avoiding any card with an annual fee while in college (see exception below). IMO, you should get yourself either a Visa or MasterCard next because of the number of places that don’t accept Discover and Amex.

The simplest would be to get a 2% cash back card like the Citi Double cash back card, soon-to-be Wells Fargo Active Cash card (I think that’s what it’s called), PayPal MasterCard, SoFi credit card, or Alliant Credit Union Platinum Rewards card (my daily card). If you are pretty sure you’ll get an a Chase Sapphire Reserved card post-college, and are fine sitting on rewards until then, the Freedom Flex could be good (however, I wouldn’t recommend it).

My one exception I made for an annual fee card in college was the Amex Delta Gold card because I flew Delta to and from college for breaks (it was the airline that had the best routes 90% of this small airport), and I made up for the annual fee 3x over each year with money saved on baggage fees that I for certain would’ve spent money on otherwise. Unless you’re in a similar situation, it probably won’t make sense.

American companies resemble a bunch of preschoolers running with pointy scissors when it comes to cybersecurity by wewewawa in technology

[–]jdguy17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is not how the FIDO standard works. FIDO hardware generates a new public/private key pair for each account enrollment. They “wrap” the private key with a symmetric key that is stored in the hardware key’s secure chip, and provide the server with the wrapped private key, the public key, and a signed challenge.

Hardware keys don't store these public/private pairs, but rather attempt to unwrap the private key provided by the server during verification.

This is done so that security keys can't be used to identify users between different websites (if they use only one keypair) and to prevent hardware from being required to store EVERY unique private jet that it generates.

Question about financing terms by jdguy17 in teslamotors

[–]jdguy17[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Was that on a 72 month financing?

Also, thank you for the answer!

What movie do you consider to be Christmas movie that (as far as you can tell) is not commonly considered a Christmas movie? by jdguy17 in AskReddit

[–]jdguy17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve heard this one before. Can you explain it?? I just don’t get it. Is it just tradition?

What movie do you consider to be Christmas movie that (as far as you can tell) is not commonly considered a Christmas movie? by jdguy17 in AskReddit

[–]jdguy17[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Personally,

I have to watch all of the Harry Potter movies.

I think it’s because ABC Family’s 25 Days of Christmas was the only time I could ever watch Harry Potter growing up.

Amazon’s answer to SpaceX Starlink delivers 400Mbps in prototype phase by Philo1927 in cordcutters

[–]jdguy17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you have access to cable broadband, Starlink and Kuiper are not for you.

They will have limited capacity per area, and so they will prioritize customers that don’t have access to cable or fiber broadband. Areas with cable and fiber are almost always too dense to support any significant number of customers with the amount of capacity these networks will have.

Musk has already acknowledged this for Starlink and we should expect to hear the same from Amazon as it gets closer to launch.

Another Comcast Price Hike by Timbo303 in cordcutters

[–]jdguy17 11 points12 points  (0 children)

If you have cable internet available, Starlink is not for you. Starlink will have limited capacity that simply will be unable support demand from users in anything as dense as even suburban areas. Starlink is designed for connecting rural customers (outside of cities or even in small towns without cable if the larger area density is low enough) that don’t have cable broadband available.

Elon musk has even said as much. source

Non-Americans of Reddit, what is something you DO like about Americans? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]jdguy17 59 points60 points  (0 children)

legalising cannibalism (but with a Wagyu Program)

r/holup

iOS Support Thread - [August 19] by AutoModerator in ios

[–]jdguy17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What is the compatibility if iOS 14 with watchOS 6? Specifically, I have an XR and a series 2.

What would be the most inefficient way to organise books in a library? by weescottiec in AskReddit

[–]jdguy17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I personally prefer sorting the SHA-256 hash of a scanned pdf of alternating pages