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[980.54 --> 986.90] They have a brilliant cloud manager that makes it simple to use Linode if you're a brand new user or if you're a pro. |
[987.06 --> 988.30] You're going to love what they have. |
[988.48 --> 989.40] Then there's the pricing. |
[990.42 --> 992.66] Linode has dialed this in. |
[992.80 --> 994.22] The value is nuts. |
[994.58 --> 996.92] They have systems, of course, are like $5 a month, right? |
[996.96 --> 999.80] But you can do different combinations depending on what you need. |
[999.88 --> 1001.68] Maybe you need a lot of memory or a lot of CPU. |
[1002.10 --> 1003.16] Maybe you need GPU. |
[1003.28 --> 1004.56] Maybe you need several GPUs. |
[1004.66 --> 1005.74] Maybe you need it all. |
[1005.74 --> 1011.56] I got to be honest, we recently just decided to go all in on our matrix server because it's getting busier and busier. |
[1012.12 --> 1013.82] And it's awesome what Linode lets you do. |
[1013.92 --> 1020.16] And even when you need to upgrade an existing machine or clone a machine or snapshot, it's all just brilliant in their cloud manager. |
[1020.28 --> 1025.16] I'm really impressed with the complexity that they can make seem so simple. |
[1025.26 --> 1030.52] You know, like I'm managing servers in data centers around the world and they just make it all seem so intuitive. |
[1030.52 --> 1031.68] So I like that. |
[1031.74 --> 1034.90] And you can really get a sense of that when you try out our $100 credit. |
[1035.00 --> 1039.38] $100 when you go to linode.com slash SSH. |
[1039.54 --> 1040.82] See what I've been talking about. |
[1040.96 --> 1042.80] And, of course, you support the show. |
[1042.94 --> 1050.32] When you go there and you visit that URL and you use that and you sign up, it tells Linode that our audience is supporting the show and that Linode should keep supporting us. |
[1050.38 --> 1052.02] It helps us put these shows out for free. |
[1052.18 --> 1054.42] It makes content like this possible. |
[1055.00 --> 1056.68] It's the circle of podcasting. |
[1056.88 --> 1059.18] Go to linode.com slash SSH. |
[1059.18 --> 1062.40] Don't be using that stinking Linux unplugged Linode code. |
[1062.50 --> 1064.30] You've got to be using that self-hosted Linode code. |
[1064.38 --> 1064.74] That's right. |
[1065.00 --> 1065.46] Live long. |
[1065.70 --> 1067.40] So hashtag SSH. |
[1067.52 --> 1071.08] Live long and go to linode.com slash SSH. |
[1073.00 --> 1076.64] My home assistant box password shamed me this week. |
[1076.74 --> 1077.44] Did you get this? |
[1077.68 --> 1078.10] Yes. |
[1078.50 --> 1080.14] Did you get it for the SSH add-in? |
[1080.38 --> 1081.44] That's what I think I got it for. |
[1082.10 --> 1084.02] Mine was node red, I think. |
[1084.68 --> 1085.96] Oh, node red. |
[1086.10 --> 1089.16] Alex, you're using a bad password with node red? |
[1089.84 --> 1090.16] Oh my goodness. |
[1090.16 --> 1091.92] Or maybe even home assistant itself? |
[1092.18 --> 1092.36] Yeah. |
[1092.44 --> 1092.72] I don't know. |
[1092.74 --> 1093.30] I've been a bit busy. |
[1093.38 --> 1094.24] I didn't actually read it. |
[1094.76 --> 1097.22] I just saw the notification and dismissed it. |
[1097.26 --> 1097.96] I was like, oh, whatever. |
[1098.04 --> 1098.72] I'll get to you later. |
[1098.86 --> 1100.38] I dismissed it and then mine came back. |
[1100.50 --> 1106.74] Mine is for the add-on core underscore SSH, which uses secrets, which have been detected as not secure. |
[1107.40 --> 1110.02] Probably a lot of people in the audience are getting this if they run home assistant. |
[1110.02 --> 1113.02] It's a new feature, quote unquote, that has been integrated. |
[1113.78 --> 1116.00] And frankly, probably a good one. |
[1116.00 --> 1119.26] Yeah, but the internet being the internet, people are pissed. |
[1119.78 --> 1122.12] I don't really get this. |
[1122.36 --> 1126.38] Maybe I'm just becoming a grumpy old man now I'm a dad. |
[1127.08 --> 1131.38] And outrage culture is just, I don't know, I'm just tired of it. |
[1131.38 --> 1138.70] So there's a link in the show notes to a post by Troy Hunt, who is an incredibly well-respected security researcher. |
[1139.18 --> 1142.68] And he's the guy that is behind the website, Have I Been Pwned? |
[1142.68 --> 1145.28] And this website is incredible. |
[1145.40 --> 1153.04] You can tap in any password into their database and it'll tell you that, yes, this password is out in the wild. |
[1153.36 --> 1161.96] And as Troy puts it, if your password is in this list, I've seen it clear text, which means that the bad guys have seen it clear text. |
[1161.96 --> 1162.44] Right. |
[1162.70 --> 1171.72] So no matter your opinion on how secure you think it is, I guarantee it's out there in the wild somewhere and somebody knows what it is. |
[1171.76 --> 1173.40] So don't use that password. |
[1173.62 --> 1176.72] It's actually pretty clever for the home assistant developers to build this in. |
[1176.76 --> 1179.90] So the way it works is your passwords are hashed. |
[1180.30 --> 1188.60] The first five characters of that hash, so just the first five characters of a hash of your password, are then used to query the Have I Been Pwned website. |
[1188.60 --> 1192.70] It then returns a result of possible password hashes that match. |
[1193.26 --> 1197.88] And then home assistant checks that list against your hash locally. |
[1198.10 --> 1201.34] All of that validation is happening on your box. |
[1201.88 --> 1214.84] And what I found really interesting, and Troy goes into full details in the article, he basically goes through the home assistant forums thread where people are bitching and moaning and whining about this feature being turned on without their permission. |
[1214.84 --> 1224.66] To give you an idea of how, I don't want to say stupid, but honestly, when I was reading this Troy Hunt article, I was like, yeah, this thread is stupid. |
[1225.48 --> 1229.14] Someone was complaining it was sending out data over their metered connection. |
[1229.40 --> 1229.50] Right. |
[1229.60 --> 1232.96] He then proceeded to say it's a few bytes. |
[1233.32 --> 1234.72] Like 36 kilobytes, you know? |
[1235.00 --> 1235.28] Yeah. |
[1235.48 --> 1239.24] We're talking five times smaller than the average web page load. |
[1239.42 --> 1242.12] If you notice that on a metered connection, then you've got problems. |
[1242.54 --> 1242.74] Right. |
[1242.74 --> 1244.60] We're not really talking very much data. |
[1244.80 --> 1250.86] And it's probably, although we don't know for sure, only happening when you start up home assistant or reload the config. |
[1251.54 --> 1254.34] How do you feel about doing this on your local LAN? |
[1254.42 --> 1257.94] I mean, I'm definitely guilty of reusing passwords on the internet. |
[1258.58 --> 1260.90] I'm certainly guilty of doing it on my LAN. |
[1261.28 --> 1265.60] That seems to be the crux of everyone's argument is my LAN, my rules. |
[1265.60 --> 1272.10] I have a safe, trusted environment, and I don't want to have to use good password hygiene. |
[1272.30 --> 1274.54] I don't want long passwords that are unique. |
[1274.54 --> 1277.70] And I can definitely relate. |
[1278.40 --> 1284.52] There's sort of, when you do this for a living, every now and then it's nice to be a little lazy. |
[1285.04 --> 1289.90] Like, you know, what's the saying about the guy who makes shoes, his kids always have the worst shoes? |
[1290.54 --> 1291.30] You know? |
[1291.66 --> 1294.80] Like, because you just get home, it's the last thing you want to do, right? |
[1294.84 --> 1295.84] It's just the last thing. |
[1296.08 --> 1296.28] Yeah. |
[1296.28 --> 1298.08] So I do understand that. |
[1298.26 --> 1301.20] However, this is where I fall down on it. |
[1301.70 --> 1311.16] The home assistant community is kind of a special case because they're playing around with IoT smart devices that are network connected. |
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