Message from @uberrice

Discord ID: 219247807050153984


2016-08-28 00:07:56 UTC  

BOTNET

2016-08-28 00:08:20 UTC  
2016-08-28 00:09:18 UTC  

>10MB for a terminal emultor

2016-08-28 00:09:29 UTC  

it has it all

2016-08-28 00:09:38 UTC  

Is it made with electron or some shit?

2016-08-28 00:10:05 UTC  

ayyy

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/189466684938125312/219247199182258176/kekekekek.PNG

2016-08-28 00:10:08 UTC  

It's nice if you work a lot with serial and it features the fileserver, generation stuff you need

2016-08-28 00:10:19 UTC  

Why is KiTTy better than the waaaay more popular PuTTY?

2016-08-28 00:10:35 UTC  

more delicious botnet

2016-08-28 00:10:46 UTC  

Because it literally a fork of putty with more features added

2016-08-28 00:10:56 UTC  

it looked the same

2016-08-28 00:11:05 UTC  

features such as?

2016-08-28 00:11:08 UTC  

and now the main screen is gone

2016-08-28 00:11:14 UTC  

just like with putty

2016-08-28 00:11:20 UTC  

Such as open the page I linked

2016-08-28 00:12:05 UTC  

ed25519 OpenSSH?

2016-08-28 00:12:11 UTC  

Without storing it in retarded PuTTY format

2016-08-28 00:12:17 UTC  

No idea

2016-08-28 00:12:21 UTC  

rip

2016-08-28 00:12:28 UTC  

you have to use that puttygen shit

2016-08-28 00:12:30 UTC  

useless features

2016-08-28 00:12:31 UTC  

to generate their format

2016-08-28 00:12:39 UTC  

you cant use the normal OpenSSH key

2016-08-28 00:13:21 UTC  

I find tht annoying

2016-08-28 00:13:39 UTC  

@uberrice It logs in automatically after you restart a session

2016-08-28 00:13:44 UTC  

I'd use it over putty for that reason alone

2016-08-28 00:15:17 UTC  

uh oh

2016-08-28 00:15:27 UTC  

>storing credentials somewhere

2016-08-28 00:15:31 UTC  

^this

2016-08-28 00:15:32 UTC  

10/10

2016-08-28 00:16:05 UTC  

I don't know about you but I'm not running trojans on my computer

2016-08-28 00:16:06 UTC  

of course that'd be a comfy feature, but you DON'T STORE PASSWORDS OTHER THAN IN SOMETHING THAT IS ENCRYPTED ITSELF - which in turn needs a password again

2016-08-28 00:16:22 UTC  

i mean, there's something specifically made to evade putting in passwords in ssh

2016-08-28 00:16:25 UTC  

it's called ssh keys

2016-08-28 00:16:31 UTC  

wel if one had a trojan there is worse thing to think about

2016-08-28 00:16:39 UTC  

like the trojan stealing the key itself

2016-08-28 00:17:07 UTC  

My point is that your "oh it stores the password in memory" argument is invalid

2016-08-28 00:17:20 UTC  

It's pure convenience

2016-08-28 00:17:42 UTC  

I believe that only counts based on your views

2016-08-28 00:17:52 UTC  

It counts in my use case

2016-08-28 00:18:17 UTC  

Ofc it's by far not the same as people storing their username and password in plaintext files