HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

tapeloop

no profile record

Submissions

Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson

en.wikipedia.org
2 points·by tapeloop·7 months ago·0 comments

How to Entirely Miss the Point of Signal in Order to Blame It

drewhoskins.substack.com
3 points·by tapeloop·last year·2 comments

How Not to Format a Private Key

keymaterial.net
2 points·by tapeloop·last year·0 comments

Signal's Meredith Whittaker on the Telegram Security Clash and OpenAI

techcrunch.com
5 points·by tapeloop·2 years ago·0 comments

Operation Rubicon and Crypto AG

en.wikipedia.org
2 points·by tapeloop·2 years ago·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by tapeloop·2 years ago·0 comments

Wired: The Deaths of Effective Altruism

wired.com
4 points·by tapeloop·2 years ago·0 comments

Carbon, a great way to create images of your code

carbon.now.sh
1 points·by tapeloop·2 years ago·0 comments

Time Crystals

en.wikipedia.org
1 points·by tapeloop·2 years ago·0 comments

Two Cicada Broods Emerge Together

weather.com
27 points·by tapeloop·2 years ago·31 comments

Top Unsolved Encrypted Messages

scienceblogs.de
2 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

Basic Rules of Cryptography

billatnapier.medium.com
2 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

Regulating Robots

schneier.com
3 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

The Phantom Time Hypothesis

zmescience.com
2 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

The Fairlight Sampler

en.wikipedia.org
1 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

MongoDB Queryable Encryption has a few flaws [pdf]

ethz.ch
3 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

Global Surveillance Disclosures from Snowden to Present Day

en.wikipedia.org
4 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

Introduction to the Noise Protocol

duo.com
1 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

Cloudguy says we should log out of Amazon

sackheads.social
39 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·52 comments

LWE Made Easier to Understand

medium.com
1 points·by tapeloop·3 years ago·0 comments

comments

tapeloop
·4 months ago·discuss
but can it run Doom?
tapeloop
·11 months ago·discuss
another year, another Hugo Awards incident
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
and?
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
did that thing where I assumed it was a technical overview of how Valve developed the Steam store. This is the second time I've done it and it probably wont be the last
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
I went from a Spring Boot house to a more modern Golang/Typescript based company relatively easily. If you can pass the tech interview in your 'new' language then you're good enough so I wouldn't worry too much about it. Most job ads are written by recruiters rather than the folk actually doing the work.
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
its on my todo list. I'll get to it. One day. I'm sure I will
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
oofty
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
Matrix got ripped apart a couple of years ago and there are some questionable aspects https://securitycryptographywhatever.com/2022/11/02/Matrix-w...
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
Fascinating article. It would be really interesting to see how things have changed in the intervening decade.
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
excellent explanation.
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
is he STILL at it?
tapeloop
·2 years ago·discuss
yeah I went to Tennessee on holiday in 2017 (from Scotland) and thought I'd managed to time it perfectly for a brood emerging, but one of the locals said it was a yearly occurrence. It was still fantastic to hear that constant background noise
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
before reading "is it malware?" after reading "it was malware"
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
:'(, 61 is no age at all
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
googles 'does it still count as a hagiography if the subject is a phone app?'
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
Crypto by Steven Levy is a great overview of the history of modern cryptography, but Serious Cryptography by JP Aumasson is an excellent technical place to start - if he's interested in coding things up it has a lot of useful examples and walkthroughs
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
it's certainly not as popular as I'd presumed it was going to be. I was on it for a while but didn't have the same level of engagement with it as I had with twitter, it was a much quieter place. I presumed it was just because twitter had managed to turn everyone off the idea of that level of engagement, but I then set up accounts on Mastodon and BlueSky, and between the two found almost everyone I'd valued on twitter. Bluesky's UI is rubbish but its nice to be able to have conversations again
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
I'm still happy letting people do code submissions at home. The important thing is that the candidate understands the code and can explain the thinking behind it. I also tend to use the follow-up interview to ask them how to extend it in various ways, but that's been my standard approach for a while.
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
"Rich students at prestigious organisations are delighted to work for nothing for now in order to get a paid role later" - fixed that. It's nothing new
tapeloop
·3 years ago·discuss
yes I love coding and would totally do it again - but I would maybe pay more attentions to design patterns than I did the first time around.

I would also sigh and focus on javascript over other languages. It's such a bad 'main' language but it's everywhere, and it's good to have a handle on the idosyncracies.