| bio | website | ali.moeeny.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Washington, DC | |
| age | 34 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 9 months |
| seen | Mar 31 at 17:29 | |
| stats | profile views | 24 |
I love to build things that people love to use.
I like scientific data analysis.
I've spent most of my life in medicine and neuroscience!
I like: vim, zsh, python, debian
I am addicted to writing code! and learning new things!!
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Sep 6 |
comment |
I see two different sets of certificates for Google websites when I am at work and when I am at home So Basically the certificate itself could not be used to verify if it is valid or not, unless you can check if it is signed by a valid CA (or the valid CA) is the key? |
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Sep 6 |
comment |
I see two different sets of certificates for Google websites when I am at work and when I am at home @iszi What details would be helpful? You mean like date issued and expiration date and ...? |
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Sep 6 |
comment |
I see two different sets of certificates for Google websites when I am at work and when I am at home Is it possible for the proxy admin, to get (given the authority, and access to a root CA) a key to sign the packets on behalf of google or anybody else so that they'd be able to inspect the packets and enforce some internet connection policy? (I mean just to avoid tampering with the browsers so that they accept the ssl proxy's signature) |
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Sep 6 |
awarded | Editor |
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Sep 6 |
revised |
I see two different sets of certificates for Google websites when I am at work and when I am at home added 59 characters in body |
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Sep 6 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 6 |
asked | I see two different sets of certificates for Google websites when I am at work and when I am at home |
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Jul 28 |
awarded | Supporter |