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From The Archives

Comment Spam Begone!

Oddly enough I’ve been seeing a lot of comment spam in the past few weeks. By “a lot” I mean more than zero. I may have been getting comment spam since the beginning, I didn’t really look into it. But I only started noticing after I added code that emails me new comments. So I just added http referer checking to the comment module. Hopefully that stops the spam. I have no idea how well spam bots are typically written. Any reasonably experienced developer should think to fake the referer. If this method is ineffective I’ll have to come up with something else – i’m thinking along the lines of ajax fired by the text field’s onChange method, I’ll have to think about that further.

That’s all for now.

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From The Archives Google Review Websites

IM, OS and Pirates, Oh My

Google Talk

If you haven’t already heard Google released Google Talk Beta on Wednesday, Google’s answer to AIM and MSN. As a nerd I feel it’s somehow my duty to talk about google even though I’m sure this has already been “blogged” about 10,000 times since Wednesday. Wired has already written a review. My two cents: the classic google simplistic design is sheer brilliance as always, I couldn’t be happier with Google’s choice to to use the jabber protocol – open protocols are where it’s at – fo shizzle, voice sound quality is superb – the use of cellphone style connect quality bars is brilliant, i hope they implement file transfers soon, multi-chat is overrated – i hope they don’t include it, tabbed chats would be nice. That’s a quick rundown of my thoughts on gTalk. Next up, windows Vista…

Asta la Vista

I installed Windows Vista Beta 1 (legally obtained, I assure you) the other day. I am definitely unimpressed. Granted I didn’t take a super close look at it. I’m convinced that Vista is going to be to XP what ME was to 98, especially at the rate they’re removing features. The main features I noticed where silly GUI ‘improvements.’ I suppose GUIs are what desktop OSes are all about. But the Vista GUIs features fall into to categories 1) ripping off Mac OS X, 2) stupid/pointless. blah….i can’t talk about this any longer

Pirates of the Spanish Main

I recently moved in close proximity to a Geek Games Store. While waiting for my bus the other day I noticed an interesting looking game in the window, Pirates of the Spanish Main. The publisher is calling it “world’s first constructible strategy game.” It’s essentially a miniatures game, wrapped in the facade of a collectable card game. You purchase the game in packs of cards which punch out like paper dolls. The cards consist of ship pieces, crew members, islands and treasure. The empty cards can then be used for in game measurement, all measurements are in S or L (short or long side of the card), pretty brilliant. The rules are dead simple and the ships are fun to build. So in conclusion, add me to your gtalk list and buy yourself some Pirates! cards i need someone to play with. (cards are water and wine proof btw)

PS. Check out A List Apart 4.0, interesting layout.

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From The Archives Winnipeg

Winnipeg Web Firms

Earlier this week I sent my resume to a bunch of Web Design, etc based in Winnipeg, in hopes they would be looking for an awesome hip web developer to give a bunch of money to. Unfortunately, none of them were. I consider myself quite good at googling, but I had quite a hard time finding Winnipeg firms the first time I looked. Such a hard time in fact, that I compiled a list and saved it to a txt file. So, in hope that this list gets picked up by google or something here it is, all Winnipeg Web Design firms I’m aware of:

Cocoon Branding Inc.
IdleWorks Inc.
Mars Hill Group
Meterx Systems
Okina Consulting
Planisphere Communications
Smokehouse A Design Company
spacecadet design
Transcension Media
ViewSource Media
Visual Lizards Inc.
WebMomentum
Web Slingers Inc.
Web Wizards Inc.

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From The Archives Web Development

better bandwidth protection: revisited

I meant to post this a couple of days after my initial bandwidth protection post, but alas, updating this site is usually the last thing on my mind.

Firstly, I glazed over something I probably should have explained in more detail. That is, the php file masquerades as the media file. The media files should not be in a web accessible location, this way it is not possible for anyone to direct link the the media file itself. To accomplish this you first need to send the proper content-type header, to tell the client it’s receiving media not a php file (the webmaster-toolkit.com has a good list of mime-types. For instance, if you’re protecting a real video file, you’d want:

header("content-type: application/vnd.rn-realmedia")

I’ve found that some browsers choke if they’re not given the proper file extension, so you’ll want to have .rm at the end of your request_uri, something like:

mediafiles.php?uid=uidstring&itemid;=id&abitraryvalue;=somethingirrelivate.rm

In case it is not completely clear, you do not necessarily want your code to do anything with the arbitrary value, it’s just there as a placeholder to tack on the file extension.

Next you’ll need to pass on the contents of the media file (after doing database queries or whatever is necessary to figure out the file path). In my original example I used the include() function. That was actually a pretty bad choice, php evaluates the content of the file being include()d and therefore will eat up some cpu cycles and potentially do really bad things if it happens to find a <? somewhere.

A function like readfile() would be a much better choice. Also, some feedback i received on digg suggests that php might bring your server to it’s kneels if you try to process a file larger than 100MB in this manner. My testing on my PII 400 fedora box did not encounter any problems, but it was far from scientific.

Security

I would also like to point out that my code snippets were not meant to be usable example code, but rather very brief outlines to help illustrate my ideas. As such, my code actually suffers the filename/path security hole I “paid lip service to.” I assumed that you would be able to figure out how to write the code yourselves. Here is an old post on NotIan.net that illustrates the bad things that can happen if you include filenames as request parameters, but fail to check the integrity of said filename/path.

Proxies

Apparently AOL (and some other ISPs) use a system of rotating proxies, in which each http request may be shunted through a different proxy server, ie. different IP address – even within the same page. This makes IP based filtering completely unreliable. I’m unsure how much internet traffic is routed through this sort of system and so I’m unsure how large of a problem this might be.

A Lighter Approach

Fear not, there is another similar approach that can be done without IP addresses whatsoever. The same concept of obfuscated keys can be applied to system for expiring links based on time.

In the first protection scheme, we essentially expired any keys which did not match the current IP address. In the last example, I included a date() value. Well, it should be fairly obvious that if you drop the ip address shenanigans you’ll get a key which expires based on date. The meat of a key generation function that expires daily would look like this

$key = md5(date('zY')+'MYSECRETSTRING');

Re: MYSECRETSTRING
Adding a secret string can be used to create a completely unique hash, making it harder to duplicate the hash. Although, i’m not cryptologist, but my gut tells me that doing so makes the hash easier to crack, as each seed contains a static token which could be used to calculate a pattern.

an important note:
Because our example uses a hashing your key generation cannot actually calculate an expiry DATE. The hash cannot be reversed so your validation function cannot retrieve to expiry date to determine if the it has passed. The only thing it can do if evaluate if the current hash matches the requested hash. Also for this reason the date format has to be exactly as precise at the duration of the key. An hourly key would have to use ‘HzY’ (24-hour format of an hour, day of year, year). If you fail to include the hour in 24hr format, the key will be valid in the morning and afternoon. If you do not include the year, the key will be valid every year on the given day. And so on.

Conversely, if you had reason to only allow access to content at certain times of day, or on certain days, you could ONLY specify that date() parameter.

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From The Archives Podcasts

inDiggnation 1.0

The first ever response cast, Indiggnation! The first installment documents issues with digg.com and foreseen problems with the OpenID protocol.

  • Ian can be found at www.notian.net
    Ryan can be found at ohryan.ca
  • Intro music is Melt-Banana – Showroom Dummies
  • Phrase BlogCast
  • Here is the story I mentioned a digg that links to Engadget, which links to cNet. Shuffle vs Super Shuffle. I did find another digg article that has very similar text, but linked directly to the Net article.
  • The ‘Premiere Episode’ that Ryan mentioned was when we tried to do a podcast with a $7 thrift store microphone that sucked soooooooo much balls. We also sounded like idiots almost the whole time. If we ever get famous, it could be released to embarrass us.
  • Ryan’s digg: Better Bandwidth Protection
  • Top 5 Hacker movies
  • algorithm
  • Open ID
  • I did a test with the OpenID system on LJ and it says “You have to be logged in” as opposed to presenting you with a log in screen (though this may be different than when Ryan first tested it.) I tested it on Deadjournal.com, and noticed a problem in that if you don’t have a paid account, you don’t get a subdomain, and the OpenID auth uses user.livejournal.com so it links you just to an error page, good going LJ!
  • The obscure URL Ryan mentioned is located, here.

Next episode of indiggnation? Coming…. maybe.