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Topic: maybe its time to stop building bitcoin web apps - page 2. (Read 4034 times)

NRF
sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 250
better educated on hacking then those that go to universities(nothing against the integrity of universities per se)

I would agree with you to a certain extent, many a time I have attempted to bash my brains out on the sharp pointy bit offered by the corner of my desk when a new graduate "invents" some new and novel way to propel feces at astonishing speed into the revolving metal blades.

But on the other hand I have also had some talented novices do their level best to put the whole mess into orbit.

I suppose what I was trying to get at is there is nothing like years of experience and training when trying to keep the shit in the bowl.
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1003
I'm not just any shaman, I'm a Sha256man
Stop the retardation, people, seriously.

You're coding a fucking financial application with no background in security? Prepare to have the shit hacked out of you. It's that simple.
I thought this guy(gal?) makes the most sense.

i have met some good friends that are better educated on hacking then those that go to universities(nothing against the integrity of universities per se). I think its mostly due to there is the "unknowing" of certain problems and angles to hack at, so they learn about a systems vulnerabilities at all angles instead of a teacher or book lecturing a long list of ways (that tend to not burn into the memory) with the home-grown security skills you get the constant hands on learning and desensitisation of failure and patience on your belt. Of course just my view point and experience.

I believe NRF stated it the most politely and professionally tbh, if you're going to reference anyone reference that poster. I'm on a bit of a tirade this evening Wink

In that case I shall take your opinions lightly --Just for this evening

member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
I say it is more of users fault than developers. For example, btc-e looked always very shady and unprofessional to me, compared to other exchanges. Bitcoinica was advertised as developed by 17-year-old.

I think it is great, that any kid can code a bitcoin application if he/she wants - no barriers to entry to the market. It is users responsibility to decide if they want to trust there services.


Hm.. great? Sort of I guess, I do get your point. Your most poignant point, however, is that it is 100% users' fault that they get taken by shitty exchanges. I just wish people were a little more aggressive about calling a spade a spade with regard to shit exchanges. Really people are very upfront here about that but nobody listens. I guess my point is, I wish idiots didn't code exchanges but you're absolutely correct that it's the users' fault for falling for seedy, shitty, obviously crappy exchanges. Nobody can stop a savvy 10 year old kid from coding an exchange and advertising it and having suckers fall for it.

 
member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
Stop the retardation, people, seriously.

You're coding a fucking financial application with no background in security? Prepare to have the shit hacked out of you. It's that simple.
I thought this guy(gal?) makes the most sense.

i have met some good friends that are better educated on hacking then those that go to universities(nothing against the integrity of universities per se). I think its mostly due to there is the "unknowing" of certain problems and angles to hack at, so they learn about a systems vulnerabilities at all angles instead of a teacher or book lecturing a long list of ways (that tend to not burn into the memory) with the home-grown security skills you get the constant hands on learning and desensitisation of failure and patience on your belt. Of course just my view point and experience.

I believe NRF stated it the most politely and professionally tbh, if you're going to reference anyone reference that poster. I'm on a bit of a tirade this evening Wink
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1006
I say it is more of users fault than developers. For example, btc-e looked always very shady and unprofessional to me, compared to other exchanges. Bitcoinica was advertised as developed by 17-year-old.

I think it is great, that any kid can code a bitcoin application if he/she wants - no barriers to entry to the market. It is users responsibility to decide if they want to trust there services.
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1003
I'm not just any shaman, I'm a Sha256man
Stop the retardation, people, seriously.

You're coding a fucking financial application with no background in security? Prepare to have the shit hacked out of you. It's that simple.
I thought this guy(gal?) makes the most sense.

i have met some good friends that are better educated on hacking then those that go to universities(nothing against the integrity of universities per se). I think its mostly due to there is the "unknowing" of certain problems and angles to hack at, so they learn about a systems vulnerabilities at all angles instead of a teacher or book lecturing a long list of ways (that tend to not burn into the memory) with the home-grown security skills you get the constant hands on learning and desensitisation of failure and patience on your belt. Of course just my view point and experience.
member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
But how will any one get a integrity in financial security if they don't make financial applications?

They could do it the way I did it, go to university, get a degree and then work in the industry for 20 years while keeping up to date, gaining certification's attending conferences, going on vendor & paid seminars.

There is no short cuts to becoming competent unfortunately.



This man speaks the truth. To anyone who can sort of hack up some scripts and figure out the bitcoind api and decides to create an exchange, I have merely this to say:

Fuck you.

NRF
sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 250
But how will any one get a integrity in financial security if they don't make financial applications?

They could do it the way I did it, go to university, get a degree and then work in the industry for 20 years while keeping up to date, gaining certification's attending conferences, going on vendor & paid seminars.

There is no short cuts to becoming competent unfortunately.

member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
Stop the retardation, people, seriously.

You're coding a fucking financial application with no background in security? Prepare to have the shit hacked out of you. It's that simple.
member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
Here's an idea:

If you don't have an actual security background with financial applications, don't code a fucking exchange.

I know that's a bit mindblowing, but think about it mr "learn ruby/python/php/node/perl (hey a guy can dream that kids are still into perl) in 24 hrs. book" guy.


But how will any one get a integrity in financial security if they don't make financial applications?

legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1003
I'm not just any shaman, I'm a Sha256man
Here's an idea:

If you don't have an actual security background with financial applications, don't code a fucking exchange.

I know that's a bit mindblowing, but think about it mr "learn ruby/python/php/node/perl (hey a guy can dream that kids are still into perl) in 24 hrs. book" guy.


But how will any one get a integrity in financial security if they don't make financial applications?
member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
Here's an idea:

If you don't have an actual security background with financial applications, don't code a fucking exchange.

I know that's a bit mindblowing, but think about it mr "learn ruby/python/php/node/perl (hey a guy can dream that kids are still into perl) in 24 hrs. book" guy.

hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1006
The most important thing bitcoin enables is easy-to-automate money transfers. This means that there can be web apps which were not possible with traditional money. Also it enables new business models. It is very difficult to implement any kind of business model in a distributed way.

Of course, this is very darwinian environment. Hopefully both users and developers will understand this. Users should not store large amount of funds in any service, and developers should be ultra cautious about developing these web apps.
member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
Or learn to code securely.

Nah, keep putting funds you can't afford to lose in a site coded in 4 days by a 17 year old. Totally solid business proposition.
c_k
donator
Activity: 242
Merit: 100
Or learn to code securely.
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1003
I'm not just any shaman, I'm a Sha256man
Tis will be great when an exchange incorporates multisig transactions... Nobody can steal at that point
hero member
Activity: 546
Merit: 500
Or stop holding massive amounts of client funds in a hot wallet.


There you go. If there is nothing there to steal, there is no temptation to do so.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
Tangible Cryptography LLC
Or stop holding massive amounts of client funds in a hot wallet.

We buy and sell coins.  
No hot wallet (no wallet at all on the server)
Manual verification of orders.
No user accounts (orders can't be changed once submitted so there is no value in trying to impersonate a user).
2 Factor encryption on all our trading & funding accounts.
Encrypted Enterprise grade database with off site backups.

Nothing is "hackproof" but we certainly present a lot smaller attack surface; a much less attractive target for hackers.  

What does every major (say 10,000+ BTC) hack have in common?  A massive shared online hotwallet holding user funds.  Maybe we start there.
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1000
or you just build bitcoin web app that are more open and mirrored
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
...and start thinking about building bitcoin apps in a more distributed way, without central points of failure?
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