Pet loss, euthanasia, eulogy, cat
A picture of "Da Boyz."
Frisco (Left) 2020
Freddy (Right) 2022
We will miss you in our hearts, but our memory will have you forever together best buds.
"Romaq" is my online identity for the last 20 years or so. It's even the name my wife came to know me as we met on Ultima Online. Who's Bono? Sting? Slash?
Then again, there are those I know by their real names because *that* is the name they choose to go by, such as Mae Dean, or Kyle Hill.
It's up to you, but there is your given name and your chosen name. Whichever you pick, you can change it if you must. Best to start out making a good one.
Nobody knows what "Romaq" means. *I* am the one who gives it meaning.
Pet loss, euthanasia, eulogy, cat
"Cried more for the loss..." That's what @mikmaqpeek said concerning her mom. She asked me about it, I said, "Depends upon the mom."
We've had Tilly, I don't think Freddy would mind. He became pretty mellow as he aged. Freddy was nearly 17 years old as well.
Pet loss, euthanasia, eulogy, cat
I love you, our one-fang boy. You needed attention so badw, but after you gave a gentle pat politely asking, you fled when we turned to you. But over the years you stopped running and basked in our love.
You were so thin, dapper, so "I'd like to meet his tailor." The last few years as your kidneys failed, you put on a few but you were always so beautiful. We teased you for talking in the hall, and you came to us wondering what our problem was when we asked you who you were talking to.
Frisco was lonely, which is why we invited you to be a part of our family. You were a great pal, part of, "Da Boyz."
Frisco had to go in the fall of 2020. Today, we let you go to be with him. Love to you both. #CatsOfMastodon
@cwwilkie There is more detail, the "stops" are intended to have a double chest, smoker, stone cutter, anvil, furnace, blast furnace, and work bench as I have material to make them. But hit a platform, it's all the same and has what you need on the spot. Nether gate in six steps away. Mining tunnels for strip mining evenly spaced so you have the best odds of hitting a vein of any width of more than one block. Vines (separate from the borehole) cover the strips so you can climb up, down, sideways to get to any strip.
And there is more detail, but I've nattered on enough. You may want screen shots, and that helps.
@cwwilkie I need to get you a screen shot. 5 x 5 walls solid, the focus is on the 3 x 3 inside.
VLV
VBV
BWB
The Ladder is the failsafe and way to get up and down until finished. Vines growing down while I dig, but "stuff happens so the ladder is solid all the way down. When I can get enough iron, the Bar in the center and two corners hold the water column in while leaving me free to move within to drop & stop easily. If I hug the center pole, I'm in free fall but it prevents me from from being too far from Vines or the Ladder to quickly break. With the Water elevator, I can hang barely in it while still rocketing up.
@cwwilkie Our "Gold Standard" for strip mining: Torch on the right = away from home. Torch on left = heading back home.
I do a "bore hole" 3x3 wide, stops at every break of 16 (64, 48, 32, 16, 0, -16, -32, -48, -59). Off the borehole is a landing at the stops, 2 high 1 wide, 3 blocks apart, next level up offset by 2. Vines all the way down. The start of the mine is only 1 deep with 2 torches. Once you start a shaft, the torch goes on the right wall. With those hella long tunnels, keep torches on the left to "go home."
The Boreholes are legendary on our server. A water drop all the way to the bottom, vines to cling to inside it, water elevator for speedy ways going up.
One trick I taught myself in #Minecraft is the directional placement of torches. Sometimes I'm doing my fern-mining technique and it suddenly opens into a network of caverns, and I have to go exploring.
If I turn to the right, all the torches go on the right wall. If possible, I'll place torches on rocky structures to point back to the exit as well. And I place one last torch on the floor at the end of a corridor so I know I don't need to run back and clear it out.
https://twitter.com/Cobratate/status/1608079654870740994?t=3ASS943FJzVNxI9bGIdIsg&s=19
😭😡"How dare you!" Just so beautiful
Climate activist Greta Thunberg has a fiery response to Andrew Tate's attempt to boast about his carbon-dioxide-emitting cars. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/greta-thunberg-andrew-tate-tweet-twitter-rcna63477
We took Freddy (the cat on the right) to the Animal Emergency place. We were so happy to get Freddy back when we arrived Monday night, but since then he's appeared more week and having trouble with his back legs.
It looked like he was either in pain or having trouble defecating. We took him in to see just how serious it was. He has health issues, chief among them his red blood cell count is only 1/4 of what it should be while all other cell counts from the bloodwork are good.
While we were waiting for the Doctor to sort out Freddy, an older woman came in with her schnauzer... bleeding on her coat. He had been attacked, apparently by a coyote. One bite went to his throat, slashes on his side. We could smell the blood. Together my wife and I wept as quietly as we could.
It was a long night. We hope the schnauzer survives. Freddy... his kidneys are failing, he has a heart murmur, he's 16... and the red blood cell count may be from cancer.
When Frisco (the cat on the left) died, my wife was stuck in a 20 min. memory lapse loop. She'd be fully awake, but then my wife would act confused and ask where Frisco was. Then I had to break the news to her that Frisco had died, she was with me when he was euthanized, that she had forgotten, but it was OK and I'd remember for us both. We would both cry, she'd be ok... then start the loop again. She has no recollection of those two days, but she remembers that Frisco is gone, fall 2020.
As I age, I find so many things I thought were important in my 20's simply doesn't matter, while things I found irrelevant then make all the difference in the world to me now. Life's funny that way.
Hug your loved ones, and your animal friends. Life comes at you fast.
I have not seen art based on the Cromaticity Diagram, seen here:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/vision/colper.html
It would be pretty cool to see that diagram worked into something.
#Minecraft, #Ark, #Valheim, looking forward to #DwarfFortress when we have funds to get it from Steam. I like to build things, and fighting some along the way. The first three I enjoy with my wife. We met on #UltimaOnline some 25 years ago.
I really love the Professor of Rock's Adam Reader. He has such compassion and respect for the music he covers and the people who created it.
Dark Side of the Moon's Brain Damage & Eclipse
Okay, after accepting the fact that you need to go very very very slow when working your way through an ancient city in #minecraft, I've actually started to really enjoy the process of covering all the sensors and shriekers in wool before carefully breaking them.
The sculk blocks are really quite beautiful if you look past the fact that they are likely an alien ecosystem that is invading the world.
I recently wrote a post detailing the recent #LastPass breach from a #password cracker's perspective, and for the most part it was well-received and widely boosted. However, a good number of people questioned why I recommend ditching LastPass and expressed concern with me recommending people jump ship simply because they suffered a breach. Even more are questioning why I recommend #Bitwarden and #1Password, what advantages they hold over LastPass, and why would I dare recommend yet another cloud-based password manager (because obviously the problem is the entire #cloud, not a particular company.)
So, here are my responses to all of these concerns!
Let me start by saying I used to support LastPass. I recommended it for years and defended it publicly in the media. If you search Google for "jeremi gosney" + "lastpass" you'll find hundreds of articles where I've defended and/or pimped LastPass (including in Consumer Reports magazine). I defended it even in the face of vulnerabilities and breaches, because it had superior UX and still seemed like the best option for the masses despite its glaring flaws. And it still has a somewhat special place in my heart, being the password manager that actually turned me on to password managers. It set the bar for what I required from a password manager, and for a while it was unrivaled.
But things change, and in recent years I found myself unable to defend LastPass. I can't recall if there was a particular straw that broke the camel's back, but I do know that I stopped recommending it in 2017 and fully migrated away from it in 2019. Below is an unordered list of the reasons why I lost all faith in LastPass:
- LastPass's claim of "zero knowledge" is a bald-faced lie. They have about as much knowledge as a password manager can possibly get away with. Every time you login to a site, an event is generated and sent to LastPass for the sole purpose of tracking what sites you are logging into. You can disable telemetry, except disabling it doesn't do anything - it still phones home to LastPass every time you authenticate somewhere. Moreover, nearly everything in your LastPass vault is unencrypted. I think most people envision their vault as a sort of encrypted database where the entire file is protected, but no -- with LastPass, your vault is a plaintext file and only a few select fields are encrypted. The only thing that would be worse is if...
- LastPass uses shit #encryption (or "encraption", as @sc00bz calls it). Padding oracle vulnerabilities, use of ECB mode (leaks information about password length and which passwords in the vault are similar/the same. recently switched to unauthenticated CBC, which isn't much better, plus old entries will still be encrypted with ECB mode), vault key uses AES256 but key is derived from only 128 bits of entropy, encryption key leaked through webui, silent KDF downgrade, KDF hash leaked in log files, they even roll their own version of AES - they essentially commit every "crypto 101" sin. All of these are trivial to identify (and fix!) by anyone with even basic familiarity with cryptography, and it's frankly appalling that an alleged security company whose product hinges on cryptography would have such glaring errors. The only thing that would be worse is if...
- LastPass has terrible secrets management. Your vault encryption key always resident in memory and never wiped, and not only that, but the entire vault is decrypted once and stored entirely in memory. If that wasn't enough, the vault recovery key and dOTP are stored on each device in plain text and can be read without root/admin access, rendering the master password rather useless. The only thing that would be worse is if...
- LastPass's browser extensions are garbage. Just pure, unadulterated garbage. Tavis Ormandy went on a hunting spree a few years back and found just about every possible bug -- including credential theft and RCE -- present in LastPass's browser extensions. They also render your browser's sandbox mostly ineffective. Again, for an alleged security company, the sheer amount of high and critical severity bugs was beyond unconscionable. All easy to identify, all easy to fix. Their presence can only be explained by apathy and negligence. The only thing that would be worse is if...
- LastPass's API is also garbage. Server-can-attack-client vulns (server can request encryption key from the client, server can instruct client to inject any javascript it wants on every web page, including code to steal plaintext credentials), JWT issues, HTTP verb confusion, account recovery links can be easily forged, the list goes on. Most of these are possibly low-risk, except in the event that LastPass loses control of its servers. The only thing that would be worse is if...
- LastPass has suffered 7 major #security breaches (malicious actors active on the internal network) in the last 10 years. I don't know what the threshold of "number of major breaches users should tolerate before they lose all faith in the service" is, but surely it's less than 7. So all those "this is only an issue if LastPass loses control of its servers" vulns are actually pretty damn plausible. The only thing that would be worse is if...
- LastPass has a history of ignoring security researchers and vuln reports, and does not participate in the infosec community nor the password cracking community. Vuln reports go unacknowledged and unresolved for months, if not years, if not ever. For a while, they even had an incorrect contact listed for their security team. Bugcrowd fields vulns for them now, and most if not all vuln reports are handled directly by Bugcrowd and not by LastPass. If you try to report a vulnerability to LastPass support, they will pretend they do not understand and will not escalate your ticket to the security team. Now, Tavis Ormandy has praised LastPass for their rapid response to vuln reports, but I have a feeling this is simply because it's Tavis / Project Zero reporting them as this is not the experience that most researchers have had.
You see, I'm not simply recommending that users bail on LastPass because of this latest breach. I'm recommending you run as far way as possible from LastPass due to its long history of incompetence, apathy, and negligence. It's abundantly clear that they do not care about their own security, and much less about your security.
So, why do I recommend Bitwarden and 1Password? It's quite simple:
- I personally know the people who architect 1Password and I can attest that not only are they extremely competent and very talented, but they also actively engage with the password cracking community and have a deep, *deep* desire to do everything in the most correct manner possible. Do they still get some things wrong? Sure. But they strive for continuous improvement and sincerely care about security. Also, their secret key feature ensures that if anyone does obtain a copy of your vault, they simply cannot access it with the master password alone, making it uncrackable.
- Bitwarden is 100% open source. I have not done a thorough code review, but I have taken a fairly long glance at the code and I am mostly pleased with what I've seen. I'm less thrilled about it being written in a garbage collected language and there are some tradeoffs that are made there, but overall Bitwarden is a solid product. I also prefer Bitwarden's UX. I've also considered crowdfunding a formal audit of Bitwarden, much in the way the Open Crypto Audit Project raised the funds to properly audit TrueCrypt. The community would greatly benefit from this.
Is the cloud the problem? No. The vast majority of issues LastPass has had have nothing to do with the fact that it is a cloud-based solution. Further, consider the fact that the threat model for a cloud-based password management solution should *start* with the vault being compromised. In fact, if password management is done correctly, I should be able to host my vault anywhere, even openly downloadable (open S3 bucket, unauthenticated HTTPS, etc.) without concern. I wouldn't do that, of course, but the point is the vault should be just that -- a vault, not a lockbox.
I hope this clarifies things! As always, if you found this useful, please boost for reach and give me a follow for more password insights!
Grinnin' Ferret