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  • Searching for Weak Debian / Ubuntu SSL Certificates

    I've seen a number of people promote packages that have shipped for Debian and Ubuntu, which allow users to scan their collected keys - OpenSSH or OpenSSL or OpenVPN, to discover whether they're too weak to be of any functional use. [See my earlier story on Debian and the OpenSSL PRNG ] These...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 05-22-2008
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris, Why is PKI so hard?, Alun's code
  • Debian and the OpenSSL PRNG

    [PRNG is an abbreviation for "Pseudo-Random Number Generator", a key core component of the key-generation in any cryptographic library.] A few people have already commented on the issue itself - Debian issued, in 2006, a version of their Linux build that contained a modified version of OpenSSL...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 05-15-2008
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris, Why is PKI so hard?
  • Apple Changes Update Policies - Still No Biscuit

    As I have mentioned in other posts ( Retro-bundling - another suck of the Apple , MacBook Air debuts; iTunes Pesters Me Again , Removing Apple Mobile Device Support , I didn't want iTunes - now I've got iPod, too? , etc, etc), this has long since stopped being an issue for me, because I've...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 05-09-2008
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris
  • Think like a bad guy? It's a start.

    Cool new site (and blog ) from Microsoft - http://securedeveloper.com - and it has a tag line I've heard many times before: Like that old maxim that "you need to stop fighting fires long enough to tell the architects to stop building things out of wood", thinking like a bad guy is just...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 05-06-2008
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris
  • CS-RCS Pro on Vista

    I've been trying back and forth to get CS-RCS Pro , a version control suite, to work on Windows Vista. I like CS-RCS Pro for a number of reasons: Files stored in CS-RCS Pro are kept in a simple format, open and well-documented. As a result, if I ever have to move away from CS-RCS Pro (say, for instance...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 02-26-2008
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris, Windows Vista, UAC
  • Removing Apple Mobile Device Support

    As mentioned before, I'm not a fan of Appple 's, particularly because they tend to impose crap on me that I'm not interested in having. I've been trying to figure out how to remove iTunes , iPod and Aple Mobile Device Support on and off now for the past month, since it was accidentally...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 12-17-2007
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris, Miscellany - not security, What my wife knows
  • I didn't want iTunes - now I've got iPod, too?

    So, in my last post " Can the EU get me QuickTime N? ", I noted that my installation of QuickTime (because I had a .MOV file I want to see) led to Apple Software Update offering me "iTunes + QuickTime 7.5", despite my removing iTunes every time I find it creeping its way onto my computer...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 11-27-2007
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris, What my wife knows
  • Can the EU get me QuickTime N?

    So, a long time ago, in a continent not so far away, the European Union required Microsoft to ship a version of Windows without Media Player , called Windows XP N. Now, here's a follow-up to my previous articles: Programmer Hubris Part 1 - He's Just Not That Into You Programmer Hubris Part 2...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 11-27-2007
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris, What my wife knows
  • Why is DR and process documentation so bad?

    Given stories of people who have failed DR tests because they fail to document the processes that are required to recover systems, it's clear that the missing link is documentation and process. Why are systems so poorly documented? I see two reasons pop up all the time: I was too busy building the...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 11-23-2007
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris
  • DRM should always be a choice

    Jesper's recent frustration with a bug in the DRM support on his Windows Media Center Edition (MCE) system demonstrates a couple of basic truths in system reliability: Complexity negatively impacts reliability. DRM contributes to complexity. Clearly, this means that DRM makes systems less reliable...
    Posted to Tales from the Crypto (Weblog) by Alun Jones on 10-02-2007
    Filed under: General Security, Programmer Hubris, Miscellany - not security, DRM
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