Terence Eden. He has a beard and is smiling.

Terence Eden’s Blog

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Movie Review: See How They Run

· 3 comments · 200 words


see how they run movie poster.

This is a perfect movie. It's packed full of little in-jokes and fourth-wall-breaking asides. It is smart, funny, and incredibly well paced. Honestly, it doesn't have a duff moment in it. If you've never seen Agatha Christie's "The Mousetrap" - I strongly advise you to watch it before this film. No, you probably don't need to - but it adds to the metatextual delights. Is the "Whodunnit" aspect…

Konami Code Domain Name

· 5 comments · 150 words · Viewed ~384 times


Glowing computer text showing dot com dot info etc.

More on my experiments with silly Punycode domain names. http://↑↑↓↓←→←→ba.tk/ Yup, copy and paste that into your browser and it will resolve. (more…) …

Poorly folded letters lead to exposure of medical data

· 11 comments · 400 words · Viewed ~296 times


A letter addressed to me. Just inside the plastic window you can see the word "colonoscopies".

I returned home from holiday to a pile of letters. Mostly junk, a few Christmas cards, and something from the NHS. This is what the envelope looked like: As it happens, I'm not particularly concerned about who knows I had a fairly normal medical procedure. I've blogged a bit about it and Tweeted about the experience in an attempt to de-stigmatise it. Terence Eden is on Mastodon@edentReplying …

Responsible Disclosure: XSS in Codeberg Pages

· 250 words · Viewed ~361 times


An XSS pop up alert on a webpage.

Codeberg is a hip new code hosting site - similar to GitHub and GitLab. And, much like Gits Hub & Lab, users can serve static content through Codeberg pages. Somehow I screwed up my configuration, and when I visited edent.codeberg.page/abc123 I got this error: Now, whenever I see something from the request echoed into the page's source, my hacker-sense starts tingling. What happens if I…

Fragile Technologists

· 7 comments · 400 words · Viewed ~720 times


A pet cat typing on a computer keyboard.

Picture the scene. You're in a pub and order, say, a cider or a cocktail. The local pub bore pipes up "What are you drinking that for? Real men drink..." and then names a brand of generic, piss-weak lager that is his substitute for a personality. He's the same guy who insists that "real men" watch football, and can't quite believe that you have no opinion on last night's cup final. This sort of …