

#confidentlyincorrect
#confidentlyincorrect
It isn’t randomly generated. If you read through you would have known that.
Also, Rainbow tables.
tldr, Rainbow tables are precomputed lists of hashed values used to crack password hashes quickly. Instead of hashing each password guess on the fly, attackers use these tables to reverse hashes and find the original passwords faster, especially for weak or common ones. They’re less effective against hashes protected by a unique salt.
The last set of comments is from 2024. These have not been addressed. The fact that it is possible to stream without auth is just bonkers.
The entirity of jellyfin security is security via obscurity which is zero security at all.
“As a cybersec researcher”, the limp wristed, hand wavy approach to security should be sending up alarm bells. The fact that it doesn’t, means that likely either, you don’t take your research very seriously, or you aren’t a “cybersecurity researcher”.
“Thank you for this list. We are aware of quite a few, but for reasons of backwards compatibility they’ve never been fixed. We’d definitely like to but doing so in a non-disruptive way is the hard part.”
Is truly one of the statements of all time.
Samesies. Best decision I ever made.
You should delete this comment.
The fact that you don’t already know why and are dependent on GUI tools that you don’t fully understand is the reason that you’re probably not a very good developer.
Git is incredibly powerful. Knowing why and how is infinitely valuable. Nothing about git cli is archaic or even particularly difficult to understand. Also the man page is very excellent.
Just a heads up, it you don’t know how to use cli git in 2025 you’re probably a shit developer. There are undoubtedly exceptions, but I would argue not knowing version control intimately makes you a bad developer.
Wow. This is certainly one of the takes of all time.