Wouldn’t it be downdowndetectordetector.com?
- 0 Posts
- 34 Comments
visnae@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Greta Thunberg: “They kicked me every time the flag touched my face”English
17·4 months agoAt the same time the Swedish equivalent was not censored.
Lilla hora = little whore
If that was not obvious
visnae@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Head of the Signal app threatens to withdraw from EuropeEnglish
5·5 months agoIt is potentially doable:
A short message is 140 bytes of gsm7-bit packed characters (I.e. each character is translated to “ascii” format which only take up 7-bit space, which also is packed together forming unharmonic bytes), so we can probably get away with 160 characters per SMS.
According to crypto.stackexchange, a 2048-bit private key generates a base64 encoded public key of 392 characters.
That would mean 3 SMSs per person you send your public key to. For a 4096-bit private key, this accounts to 5 SMSs.
As key exchange only has to be sent once per contact it sounds totally doable.
After you sent your public key around, you should now be able to receive encrypted short messages from your contacts.
The output length of a ciphertext depends on the key size according to crypto.stackexchange and rfc8017. This means we have 256 bytes of ciphertext for each 2048-bit key encrypted plaintext message, and 512 bytes for 4096-bit keys. Translated into short messages, it would mean 2 or 4 SMSs for each text message respectively, a 1:2, or 1:4 ratio.
- NIST recommends abandoning 2048-bit keys by 2030 and use 3072-bit keys (probably a 1:3 ratio)
- average number of text messages sent per day and subscriber seems to be around 5-6 SMS globally, this excludes WhatsApp and Signal messages which seems to be more popular than SMS in many parts of the world [quotation needed, I just quickly googled it]
Hope you have a good SMS plan 😉
Amazing, did you beat her? Did you win?
visnae@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Trump reportedly to back ceding of Ukrainian territory to Russia as part of peace dealEnglish
3·6 months agoAnd don’t forget Georgia.
visnae@lemmy.worldto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL there is a law called Marchetti's Constant. Humans only tolerate commutes of less than ~1 hour. Housing outside that limit will fail.English
6·7 months agoThe City of London lies within Greater London itself. The king may not enter the City of London without the Lord Mayor of London’s (Not to be confused with the mayor of London) approval, or something like that.
3GPP has an interesting way of serialising bools on the wire with ASN.1
NULL OPTIONAL
meaning only the type would be stored if true, otherwise it won’t be set at all
Wasn’t it vista that started to hide things in the control panel?
visnae@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•keyboard design contest #00 results - Ortho lab logs!!English
5·11 months agoCool contest! On the same topic I think https://forgekeyboard.com/ might inspire
visnae@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•The EU beat COVID and ditched Russian energy. Now it must learn to live without US security helpEnglish
2·1 year agoUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the States of America
visnae@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Trump refuses to rule out use of military force to take control of Greenland and the Panama CanalEnglish
17·1 year ago- Trump takes US out of NATO,
- attacks Greenland (Denmark),
- all NATO countries goes to war with the US.
- ???
- Profit?
visnae@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What's the strangest thing you've brought home from the bar?
2·1 year agoCactus, cloth hanger, and a salt mill. Three different bars, same night. Another night my friend got home with a light bulb…
https://thatoneprivacysite.xyz/ is a good base for comparisons
Guests at restaurants where you get a device that beeps when your food is ready. Guess what? That’s a pager.
visnae@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Las Vegas' dystopia-sphere, powered by 150 Nvidia GPUs and drawing up to 28,000,000 watts, is both a testament to the hubris of humanity and an admittedly impressive technical feat | PC GamerEnglish
2·2 years agoBefore the Sphere, the largest spherical building in the world (since 1989) was the Globe in Stockholm.
On it they sometimes project stuff on, which seems to be a way cheaper and energy efficient way than adding a billion LEDs.
Fun fact about the arena Globen, it’s actually the biggest piece in a art installation about our solar system, representing the sun. Pluto is about halfway up in Sweden.
It’s also the home arena of Swedens national ice hockey team.
visnae@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•NATO Member Sweden Says Russia Disrupting Its Satellite NetworksEnglish
1·2 years agoHehe that is true



…on a social media…