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> This is the main solution of Firefox for playing MP3 files internally.
Bollocks
VLC Player is *the main solution*, and doesn't fall foul of this vulnerability,
Your system is only as good as the weakest software you install.
www.openssl.com
Basic SSL certificates free with an email address, wildcard SSL $59 with proof of address and identity (i.e. passport and 2 recent billing for utilities gas electric water etc) good for 1 year.
How difficult could it be?
I beg to differ after reverse engineering a bastardized version of LZSS used on CDs supplied by a major home and garden chain, simply by staring at it long enough and recognizing the flags, lengths and offset patterns.
Encrypted data is a whole other kettle of fish to compressed data.
Especially in Glasgow of all places, if you said this to someones face, you'd get your heed caved in. What makes the Internet so special that it absolves idiots from responsibility for their words?
It's a simple enough rule of thumb, if you wouldn't say it in real life to someones face, then don't say it online behind a shield of anonymity.
"Same-origin policy is a nightmare for use with CDNs"
It's not *that* big a deal. We've been using Rackspace CDN solution, and they allow you to set "Access-Control-Allow-Origin:*". After that it's just a matter of enabling CORS in your AJAX, which is one line of jQuery. Then you can fetch data from anywhere without your browser croaking.
> Look, even if someone gets local access to your files, you are still less fucked if some of them are encrypted.
Which is total bollocks if the encryption key is on the same machine. A computer that is rooted is no longer secure, any data that can be decrypted locally is the same as if it was plaintext anyway.
This. Did we learn nothing from IE6 and the ActiveX legacy?
At a time when developers should be writing stuff that works across any browser (HTML5, CSS, JS), Chrome is trying to divide the web again with things that "only work" in their browser.