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    Security Of Cloud Shared Links

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @Dashrender said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

      @BRRABill said:

      @Dashrender said

      Youtube is Google's product, why would you expect anything less?

      It was instantaneous. Creepy.

      again.. Google property. but even when not, Google is pretty damned fast at finding things.. I'm sure they have 10's of Gb of bandwidth doing only that.

      Or, you know, 100s of Tb of bandwidth.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @BRRABill
        last edited by

        @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

        @Dashrender said

        Youtube is Google's product, why would you expect anything less?

        It was instantaneous. Creepy.

        SW and ML take under one minute to be listed on Google results, and I know that ML doesn't submit to Google, Google just watches the updates.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @BRRABill
          last edited by

          @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

          @Dashrender said

          again.. Google property. but even when not, Google is pretty damned fast at finding things.. I'm sure they have 10's of Gb of bandwidth doing only that.

          Our company is barely on there.

          I literally tested a video of myself on ML and it was up in 3 milliseconds.

          But the connect is direct. That's like being creeped out that you flipped that thing on the wall and "instantly" the room was bathed in light. When you post to Google, you are submitting directly into the search engine. Of course it returns instantly.

          BRRABillB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • BRRABillB
            BRRABill @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said

            That's like being creeped out that you flipped that thing on the wall and "instantly" the room was bathed in light.

            That IS creepy.

            And how we can talk to each other half a globe away.

            CREEPY!

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • BRRABillB
              BRRABill @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller said

              If you leave them open AND publish them somewhere for the search engines to find, of course they are. Same as if you put your username and password here on ML, the search engines would find that too.

              Well, aren't all these public links we were discussing have such great security all "open"?

              Are you saying that unless you publish them directly to the search engine, no search engine is EVER going to find them?

              scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @BRRABill
                last edited by

                @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                Well, aren't all these public links we were discussing have such great security all "open"?

                yes, in the same way that all of your current files are "open." If you are currently open, then the shared links are still open but more secure than what you have today. If what you have today is closed, then the public links are "more closed."

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                • C
                  Carnival Boy
                  last edited by

                  I'm not really understanding this thread. If you publish a video on YouTube (or similar) and set it to "unlisted", then only those people with the link can find it. It won't be indexed by search engines because it's marked as unlisted.

                  If someone takes your link and publishes on a website, then it will be indexed, because it is no longer private - the link has been shared to the world. The video isn't shared or publicly exposed, but the link to it is.

                  Is that what you're talking about?

                  scottalanmillerS BRRABillB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @BRRABill
                    last edited by

                    @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                    Are you saying that unless you publish them directly to the search engine, no search engine is EVER going to find them?

                    Not quite. I'm saying that the search engines are less likely to find them than they are to find your username and password and publish everything you have today.

                    I think the issue is not that you are misunderstanding public link security, but that you overly trust an emotional response to usernames.

                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                      last edited by

                      @Carnival-Boy said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                      I'm not really understanding this thread. If you publish a video on YouTube (or similar) and set it to "unlisted", then only those people with the link can find it. It won't be indexed by search engines because it's marked as unlisted.

                      If someone takes your link and publishes on a website, then it will be indexed, because it is no longer private - the link has been shared to the world. The video isn't shared or publicly exposed, but the link to it is.

                      Is that what you're talking about?

                      That would be, more or less, the same as someone publishing your username and password. I think that he thinks that in one case that is likely and in one it is not. But I think that he has the "likely" reversed.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • BRRABillB
                        BRRABill @Carnival Boy
                        last edited by

                        @Carnival-Boy said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                        I'm not really understanding this thread. If you publish a video on YouTube (or similar) and set it to "unlisted", then only those people with the link can find it. It won't be indexed by search engines because it's marked as unlisted.

                        If someone takes your link and publishes on a website, then it will be indexed, because it is no longer private - the link has been shared to the world. The video isn't shared or publicly exposed, but the link to it is.

                        Is that what you're talking about?

                        Kind of. My question is...

                        If I don't post it to be indexed and the person I shared it with doesn't post it to be indexed, will it ever be indexed?

                        scottalanmillerS C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @BRRABill
                          last edited by

                          @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                          @Carnival-Boy said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                          I'm not really understanding this thread. If you publish a video on YouTube (or similar) and set it to "unlisted", then only those people with the link can find it. It won't be indexed by search engines because it's marked as unlisted.

                          If someone takes your link and publishes on a website, then it will be indexed, because it is no longer private - the link has been shared to the world. The video isn't shared or publicly exposed, but the link to it is.

                          Is that what you're talking about?

                          Kind of. My question is...

                          If I don't post it to be indexed and the person I shared it with doesn't post it to be indexed, will it ever be indexed?

                          Potentially, exactly the same as with your non-shared links being indexed with the username and password passed in. Possible, yes, but less possible than the alternative. Same answer I keep giving. Safer than the other option.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            @scottalanmiller said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                            @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                            Are you saying that unless you publish them directly to the search engine, no search engine is EVER going to find them?

                            Not quite. I'm saying that the search engines are less likely to find them than they are to find your username and password and publish everything you have today.

                            I think the issue is not that you are misunderstanding public link security, but that you overly trust an emotional response to usernames.

                            There are two parts here - which is where I am seeing some possible confusion coming in.

                            Brrabill asked about these public links - are they safe are they secure.

                            Then separately he noticed that one or more vendors also included the email address in said link.

                            These are two separate mostly unrelated questions/concerns.

                            As for the first one, assuming it doesn't contain the email address or some other identifiable marker of it's owner - is safe because of the unlikeliness of guessing the correct link name to find the file.

                            With the second one, you have information leakage - you know who the owner is - but that's all. You still have to guess randomly created link to the file.

                            Is it as good as the first - no, but is it horrible? probably not really.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • C
                              Carnival Boy @BRRABill
                              last edited by

                              @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                              If I don't post it to be indexed and the person I shared it with doesn't post it to be indexed, will it ever be indexed?

                              No, it shouldn't be. That's the purpose of YouTube's "unlisted" option. It's hidden from everyone who doesn't have the link. Search engines can't index URLs that are hidden.

                              DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • BRRABillB
                                BRRABill
                                last edited by

                                Shockingly, I was misinformed about how indexing works.

                                I thought there was a lot more magic to it, apparently!

                                I now understand that standalone pages on a site cannot be indexed, except by brute force. On any site.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • DashrenderD
                                  Dashrender @Carnival Boy
                                  last edited by

                                  @Carnival-Boy said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                                  @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                                  If I don't post it to be indexed and the person I shared it with doesn't post it to be indexed, will it ever be indexed?

                                  No, it shouldn't be. That's the purpose of YouTube's "unlisted" option. It's hidden from everyone who doesn't have the link. Search engines can't index URLs that are hidden.

                                  That assumes that a spider can't find it. Tons of pages aren't linked anyone on any page, yet Google is aware of them because their spiders crawl all over the page doing ls commands looking for anything and everything.

                                  Now these shared links hopefully aren't real - instead they are hopefully virtual links that tell a DB what file should be connected to, and hopefully the DB itself is not crawlable.

                                  StrongBadS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • StrongBadS
                                    StrongBad @Dashrender
                                    last edited by

                                    @Dashrender said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                                    That assumes that a spider can't find it.

                                    Spidering is defined as the following of links. If it is unlinked, by definition, a spider cannot find it.

                                    BRRABillB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • BRRABillB
                                      BRRABill @StrongBad
                                      last edited by

                                      @StrongBad said

                                      Spidering is defined as the following of links. If it is unlinked, by definition, a spider cannot find it.

                                      That is what @scottalanmiller told me. (I think, don't want to put words in his mouth.)

                                      If it's not linked, it can't be found except by brute force.

                                      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • StrongBadS
                                        StrongBad @Dashrender
                                        last edited by

                                        @Dashrender said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                                        Tons of pages aren't linked anyone on any page, yet Google is aware of them because their spiders crawl all over the page doing ls commands looking for anything and everything.

                                        ls commands? How would they do that? There isn't any ls command in HTTP.

                                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • DashrenderD
                                          Dashrender @BRRABill
                                          last edited by

                                          @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                                          @StrongBad said

                                          Spidering is defined as the following of links. If it is unlinked, by definition, a spider cannot find it.

                                          That is what @scottalanmiller told me. (I think, don't want to put words in his mouth.)

                                          If it's not linked, it can't be found except by brute force.

                                          OK I guess I used the wrong term... Google definitely knows about new pages where links to that site don't exist yet, or much - and it brute forces those sites... and it is undoubtedly brute forcing major websites looking for new pages, not waiting for links to those to appear first.

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                            last edited by

                                            @Dashrender said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                                            @BRRABill said in Security Of Cloud Shared Links:

                                            @StrongBad said

                                            Spidering is defined as the following of links. If it is unlinked, by definition, a spider cannot find it.

                                            That is what @scottalanmiller told me. (I think, don't want to put words in his mouth.)

                                            If it's not linked, it can't be found except by brute force.

                                            OK I guess I used the wrong term... Google definitely knows about new pages where links to that site don't exist yet, or much - and it brute forces those sites... and it is undoubtedly brute forcing major websites looking for new pages, not waiting for links to those to appear first.

                                            @BRRABill and I were discussing this and this can't be possible. That would be illegal, in fact, as it would qualify as hacking. And it is technically impossible. Google and everyone else only follows published links.

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