Today is a special episode because not only do we have one of the most OG artists who created NFTs before NFTs even existed, but it is also the 100th episode of Zima Red! When I started this in 2019 I had no expectations on doing this for over a few months and now, 2 years later, I am looking forward to keeping this up for the next decade. Please enjoy my conversation with Josie, Ben and Chris. It is always amazing speaking with teams of this caliber and I look forward to watching what they build going forwardĪlso Josie wanted me to remind everyone that the last day to sign up for the CyberBroker allowlist is Feb 18, midnight. It is also exciting to see how they are pushing the technical boundaries of NFTs by putting assets with exceptionally high-level of detail, on-chain. It is incredible to hear the team's story as not only are they all OGs, but they have created this elaborate backstory that explains the lore of the CyberBrokers universe and really brings the project to life. CyberBrokers serve as the foundation for an entire ecosystem that is going to be part story, part game and part experience. This is a special episode because not only is Josie my wife, but she is also creating a project called Cyberbrokers, which is a series of 10,001 fully on-chain art collectibles. My guests today are Josie, Ben and Chris. If you want to learn from an expert in asset management and how web3 will change the future of finance, then this is the episode for you US securities laws and how they can co-exist How the crypto markets experiences full boom and bust cycles in condensed timelines The traditional asset manger business and how it works How he grew his Fidelity business from $0 dollars to having $18b under management Eric is also the host of the amazing podcast web3 breakdowns which is part of Patrick O'Shaughnessy media network Colossus. Eric was at Fidelity for 16 years and has recently jumped full-time into web3 - Eric has a wealth of experience from Fidelity - starting as an intern, working up to portfolio manager, and even being able to launch his own busines within Fidelity which became a huge success. If you have a change, drop a line to following individuals have made significant contributions to Cryptcat:My guest today is Eric Golden. Someone else got the same change in before you. Submitted a change, and its here with someone else's name, that just means So, if you have submitted something, and its not here, let me know. "approval" process that makes it unclear if that will actually happen. To get this up on sourceforge, but there seems to be some sort of I've been doing my best to keep up, we are trying Since release alot of people have been submitting changes (many timesįor the same thing). Thanks for the contributions: linux 7.0 build fixes, tricky bug fixes, -k option, OpenBSD/FreeBSD compiles, directory friendly zips & tars, including MSVC++ makes. The pipe is opened, but I/O is not encrypted. This option is intended to allow CryptCat to be used as an encrypting tunnel for a spawn'd binary. The included binary is compiled with the compile time option "GAPING_SECURITY_HOLE" to allow the '-e' option to work. The release comes with a precompiled binary which has a gaping security hole in the '-e' option. There is a CERT vulnerability released on CryptCat for NT. Not if you know the secret key, which is hardcoded to be "metallica" (use the -k option to change this key) However, in this case the data transferred is encrypted. This is identical to the normal netcat options for doing exactly the same thing. In conformance with the original NetCat license. 196)Ĭryptcat is licensed under the the GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later Of twofish from cryptix, converted it to C++ (don't ask why), and enhanced it byĪdding CBC mode and the ciphertext stealing technique from Applied Cryptography (pg. Note that the L0pht has information on their copyrights covering netcat. Netcat was origianally written by the l0pht (hobbit and weld pond). Cryptcat is the standard netcat enhanced with twofish encryption by farm9.
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