I don't know why this video was made. Like, I understand the subject matter, but I don't understand why the CS50 team decided to make a video about it. I don't know what CS50 Live is, I didn't know two whole seasons of it happened already. All I do know is, I enjoyed watching this. And I feel smarter now. Thank you. - Nick P.S.: _First._
What the browsers did is totally nonsense imho! Something that hashes to the same value will be random, too big and represents something invalid and that will not work as a fake malicious certificate. I just can't understand it. I agree on not using that to store passwords, but not in signing certificates. I really love you David, and I love to listen to you, and I wish that you clarified this issue in your video. I'm really confused.
Simplistic and elegant; you guys are making videos with quality content and suited narration for students. Really amazing, glad I joined CS50 on edx.
This needs to be shared!
awesome thanks.
I don't know why this video was made. Like, I understand the subject matter, but I don't understand why the CS50 team decided to make a video about it. I don't know what CS50 Live is, I didn't know two whole seasons of it happened already.
All I do know is, I enjoyed watching this. And I feel smarter now.
Thank you.
- Nick
P.S.: _First._
its from this course www.edx.org/course/introduction-computer-science-harvardx-cs50x
Awesome! Thanks for such a nice explanation!
What the browsers did is totally nonsense imho!
Something that hashes to the same value will be random, too big and represents something invalid and that will not work as a fake malicious certificate.
I just can't understand it.
I agree on not using that to store passwords, but not in signing certificates.
I really love you David, and I love to listen to you, and I wish that you clarified this issue in your video.
I'm really confused.