• nottorp 34 minutes ago

In the same direction, I once wanted to test an embedded device on crap wifi.

So I just ordered the cheapest AP I could find.

Except the damn device worked perfectly. Slow but rock solid.

One of our testers at $CURRENT_JOB also has trouble simulating a crap network, because our network is good.

• Groxx 20 minutes ago

Some proxies, iptables extensions, and OS-provided tools exist - there's almost certainly a combo that would work for them. What platform?

Unless it's for a custom physical device, then uh. idk. Probably something, proxying through another computer that is hosting a separate wifi network? But likely a lot harder.

• nottorp 15 minutes ago

I think he figured it out eventually, used some software tool. But I heard the complaining first.

• paulirish 3 hours ago

https://badssl.com/ also offers several test subdomains in the same vein.

• ipython 2 hours ago

Interesting. Chrome (146, macOS) shows no error messages on the revoked cert pages, but Firefox does (also macOS).

• mcpherrinm 2 hours ago

Yeah, Chrome only partly supports revocation (Not sure exactly the criteria, but our test sites don't match it).

• moralestapia an hour ago

Same with Brave, so it is a Chromium thing.

• lifis 2 hours ago

Vanadium, Chrome and Firefox (all for Android) all accept all the revoked certificates... But revoked.badssl.com is considered revoked

• RunningDroid an hour ago

> Vanadium, Chrome and Firefox (all for Android) all accept all the revoked certificates... But revoked.badssl.com is considered revoked

Firefox Beta (150.0b7) is accepting all of the revoked certs on my device

• bullen 3 hours ago

Meanwhile HTTP keeps working just fine and is decentralized.

Just "add your own crypto" on top, which is the ONLY thing a sane person would do.

3... 2... 1... banned?

• horsawlarway 41 minutes ago

to actually tackle this (on the off chance you're serious, I'm assuming not) - this doesn't work.

The payload that implements your crypto cannot be delivered over http, because any intermediate party can just modify your implementation and trivially compromise it.

If you don't trust TLS, you have to pre-share something. In the case of TLS and modern browser security, the "pre-shared" part is the crypto implementation running in the browser, and the default trusted store of root CAs (which lives in the browser or OS, depending).

If you want to avoid trusting that, you've got to distribute your algorithm through an alternative channel you do trust.

• xandrius 2 hours ago

Did you self-ban?

• bullen 2 hours ago

XD Nope, more like self destruct! ;)