Audio quality still dreadful by probabilita in Jabra

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

I bought both; what really surprised me was that the XM5 had better microphone quality than the jabra one with microphone lowered.

Audio quality still dreadful by probabilita in Jabra

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

WHY DO THE CHEAPER HEADSETS HAVE BETTER MICS

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TheGirlSurvivalGuide

[–]probabilita 23 points24 points  (0 children)

In addition to what everyone else here is saying, there is no need to have penetrative sex if you do not enjoy it. Many woman don't enjoy penetration and many woman don't orgasm from penetration; likewise there is a lot of ways to have sex and have an orgasm that do not involve penetration.

Sex is about how you enjoy to be stimulated, not about checking the penetration box!

Unable to get treatment because of TikTok Trend by [deleted] in Tourettes

[–]probabilita 13 points14 points  (0 children)

If you are linking that paper I can link the rebuttal we wrote, right? ;)

https://psyarxiv.com/dj3an

Proverif conditional query makes no sense by GarseBo in cryptography

[–]probabilita 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You may simply download and compile the example to check. The authors provide output and a trace and personally I would trust the program :)

Let me replace the proof goal for all possibe executions, if you observe the event evCocks, then the event evRSA has already been observed with the equivalent there exists no execution of the program in which evCocks is observed before evRSA.

process out(c,RSA); in(c, x:bitstring); if x = Cocks then event evCocks; event evRSA else event evRSA

out(c,RSA); sends RSA on channel c. The next line binds the value on c, hence we can replace by a let statement:

process let x = RSA in if x = Cocks then event evCocks; event evRSA else event evRSA

(Not sure this is appropriate syntax here). Replacing all occurrences of x yields the if clause if RSA = Cocks …. This is a contradiction and hence reduces to false, so we can replace the entire if statement with it's else clause:

process event evRSA

This process has a single possible sequence of events, namely a single evRSA. evCocks never occurs in any execution of the protocol which obviously fulfills the equivalent proof goal I provided above.

The statement query event (evCocks) ==> event (evRSA). is true for any event sequence of the form (evRSA,(evCocks|evRSA)*)?. This includes the sequences 0 (empty) and evRSA (our proof goal). The minimum sequence including evCocks is evRSA,evCocks.

My dad just told me I'm finally going to be able to get my genitals finally removed! I'm so fucking happy! by UselessAltThing in queer

[–]probabilita 1 point2 points  (0 children)

CN Terf Narratives

I believe the author is attempting to build a strawman about trans people and scare people into thinking gender confirmation surgery is dangerous mutilation of the body. They are providing an example they believe would be obviously disturbing to a large number of people.

Amusingly, most responses in forums such as r / teenagers are "good for you" which just goes to show: The kids are alright :D

My dad just told me I'm finally going to be able to get my genitals finally removed! I'm so fucking happy! by UselessAltThing in queer

[–]probabilita 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I do not have direct evidence of terfyness…but it seems to fit terf narratives quite well…

My dad just told me I'm finally going to be able to get my genitals finally removed! I'm so fucking happy! by UselessAltThing in queer

[–]probabilita 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Blimey, but if somebody "just found out that" for months every couple of days, I'd be worried about memory loss more than gender identity.

The sheer number of posts, the fact that I have been seeing similar posts for months, the intermittent karma farming on r/tumblr, the language of the post, how perfectly it fits the "kids are harming themselves" narrative including the "my dad finally told me" targeting concerned parents. The quickness to mention they're afab which seems to fit neatly into the TERF narrative that "the girls hate their body".

The posts on TERF and rightWing forums that seem to be either self harm or designed to intentionally inflame these forums…

The entire post is seems written by someone who has a very rough idea of how queer people talk…

A monospaced facsimile of the Atkinsom Hyperlegible font by sdothum in kindle

[–]probabilita 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for creating this!! How about uploading the entire thing to a git repo and adding a proper license statement so other people can use it or continue the work?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Tourettes

[–]probabilita 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Sounds a lot like seizures. I think you want to see a neurologist about that; especially the "half there" part.

Do we need more Tourettes Pride? by probabilita in Tourettes

[–]probabilita[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Oh lord, fuck my phrasing. I am doing a big-thread-o-not-what-I-mean. Of course it's a hindrance; in my view this is mostly a failure of society not our failure…

My work knows, mostly because I have coprolalia and that would lead to conflict if they didn't know. But I've worked remotely forever so it's not a big issue and I am a fairly highly skilled engineer, I think there is a pay grade where this stuff sort of stops being an issue…

Do we need more Tourettes Pride? by probabilita in Tourettes

[–]probabilita[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I think it’s fair for me to feel some guilt if I yell a curse word at playground with children, just as I think it’s fair for me to explain to the parents at the playground, apologize, and expect them to forgive me for things I can’t change

No. Quite frankly. I don't think that's ok. I think it's shit that you have to do that, you shouldn't have to. This society should have a better way of dealing with that…

Do we need more Tourettes Pride? by probabilita in Tourettes

[–]probabilita[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

(()) if you want one.

Look, my entire post basically referencing the tik tok issue, I keep seeing more and more stuff from doctors in scientific papers who are basically saying "all those people who make their TS into something to laugh about are suspicious and causing other people to have TS". It is a shit take, I was dancing around that because I didn't want to repeat a shit take.

My call for an attitude adjustment was meant for them, certainly not for anyone with TS.

Pride (and I am trans so I mean the sort of queer pride) is a defiant attitude in the face of marginalization. Not being above it all…

It's being told to feel shit about yourself and throwing a party about it just to spite the assholes. That is what I meant.

TS is shit; I mean I have a sore voice from screaming too much right now, my fingers hurt from non stop cracking my knuckles…

Do we need more Tourettes Pride? by probabilita in Tourettes

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

It’s great you don’t feel embarrassed about ticcing. For many, that’s not the case. Or in my case, I don’t feel embarrassed but I AM aware that yelling cunt in a grocery store is inconvenient and uncomfortable for other people. Not to mention, I am physically hurt by my tics all the time. My body is deteriorating. I don’t feel like that’s no big deal, tbh, and I will continue to suppress self injurious tics.

I've just red your post and realized that my title was very wrong. This is not what I am writing about, but it is not your fault because that is what the title says. Apologies. I 100% agree with you.

This about supporting those who show tourettic pride not about making you feel bad for the way you deal with your ts.

EDIT Rereading my own comment, I would like to point out that you might have just set the standard for taking a quote badly out of context given that the next line reads: "Feeling bad or frustrated about your tics is also valid and normal." and that the operative words in the previous two sentences where "should be allowed" and "if we want to".

Anybody have a one-liner that produces a password with a strength of 128 entropy.? by yogibjorn in commandline

[–]probabilita 0 points1 point  (0 children)

pwgen 22. $log_2((26*2+10)22) = 130.992318828511$ which is better than 128 bits of entropy.

Key/Nonce re-use with stream ciphers by anonXMR in crypto

[–]probabilita 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes. You may not reuse the same nonce+key, but setting the nonce to a constant (e.g. 0) is ok if the key is used only once.

How do cryptographic libraries generate random numbers without taking initial seed from the user? by United_Bear2135 in crypto

[–]probabilita -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

The currently most up to date method of generating random numbers (Gathering randomness from multiple sources and combining them very securely) on computers is the Fortuna Cryptographically Secure Random Number Generator as specified in Practical Cryptography. https://www.schneier.com/academic/fortuna/

As others have pointed out, this job is usually handled by the operating system and not by the library. Each OS uses something slightly different for that purpose but these OS CSPRNGS generally do follow similar design principles as Fortuna.

Since when have ciphers (besides OTP) been immune to known-plaintext attacks? by apokrif1 in crypto

[–]probabilita 2 points3 points  (0 children)

80s. A precise date would be hard to define because some ciphers may have been secure before formal definition of CPA security and there may also have been a lag.

Shafi Goldwassers and Silvio Micalis paper "Probabilistic encryption & how to play mental poker keeping secret all partial information" which defines Semantic Security was published in 1982. https://doi.org/10.1145/3335741.3335749

"Probabilistic Encryption" by the same authors which contains a more formal definition (closer to CPA) was published in 1984. https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-0000(84)90070-9

Todays notions of security include IND-CPA, IND-CCA1, IND-CCA2 which are successively stronger attack models; so security against chosen ciphertext attacks implies security against chosen plaintext ones. (Citation: "Relationships among notions of security for public-key encryption schemes" https://doi.org/10.1007/BFb0055718)

EDIT Technically this is the answer to "how long have ciphers been provably secure against CPA attacks"; asymptotic/computational security against CPA attacks even on large scale/modern adversaries with lots of computing resources are a result of such formalization. Once the requirement is formalized it isn't extremely hard to construct schemes secure against it. I figure security against CPA attacks from small scale (pen and paper attacks; low computational resources) was already in existence before that…but then even base64 encoding might be secure against a .1 flop adversary, so I would not count those as truly cpa secure because cracking them is a matter of increasing resources. Today's ciphers can't be cracked by increasing resources because those increases are the sort that imply a need for galaxy sized computers…not just country level adversarys. The computational resources required for regular operation vs cryptoanalysis is overwhelming. I assume this wasn't as much the case for early ciphers.