Today I Learned - Series three
Let’s see what interesting and or unique things you have learned so we can all learn a little something today!
Let’s see if we can keep the knowledge sharing until I can make this a territory!
Previous series post #705311
21 sats \ 5 replies \ @k00b 1 Oct
TIL you can store CryptoKey objects in indexeddb that can hold secret key material that can’t be read but can still be used to perform cryptographic operations.
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Not being that savvy what’s the pro of this?
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0 sats \ 3 replies \ @k00b 1 Oct
It means applications can store secrets in the browser that are harder to steal.
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So you could hide the kfc secret herbs and spices recipe in plain site on the browser
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 1 Oct
Yep the Colonel could sleep more soundly.
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Imagine how many SN secrets you could hide in these walls
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @Leonard 30 Sep
Today I learned that in the late 19th century, some banks in the U.S. issued their own currency notes, known as "banknotes." These notes could vary widely in design and value, leading to a confusing system until the federal government standardized currency with the National Banking Act of 1863.
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Is that where the words bank notes come from or that saying? That’s interesting for sure
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The name "Antarctica" comes from the Greek word antarktiké (ἀνταρκτική), meaning "opposite to the Arctic." It was used to describe the southern polar region because it is located at the opposite end of the Earth from the Arctic (from "arktikós," which refers to the northern polar region, derived from "arktos," meaning "bear," a reference to the northern constellation Ursa Major, the Great Bear).
The name was first used in antiquity to describe a hypothetical southern continent, but it became associated specifically with the landmass of Antarctica after its discovery and exploration.
The first confirmed landing on Antarctica is generally credited to the American sealer John Davis, who is believed to have set foot on the continent on February 7, 1821. Davis was a captain of a sealing ship, and his landing occurred near what is now the Antarctic Peninsula, although it wasn't widely acknowledged at the time.
However, other expeditions had sighted the continent earlier, such as those by Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen (Russian), Edward Bransfield (British), and Nathaniel Palmer (American) in the early 1820s, but these did not involve confirmed landings.
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