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IPv6 Based Canvas

canvas.openbased.org

91 points by tylermarques 6 months ago · 27 comments

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uncircle 6 months ago

Web devs: please, PLEASE, learn the difference between History.pushState() and History.replaceState(). It's the latter you want. Please do not spam my browser history just because I have interacted with your app; it's rude.

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History/rep...

  • remram 6 months ago

    I get this issue on YouTube every time (well, other way). On mobile, go to front page, search, hit a search result. Go back and you're on the front page...

    If Google can't get it right (or don't care to) I think it's a lost battle.

  • ElijahLynn 6 months ago

    THIS. My browser history just had 100 entries added to it. Now I gotta got delete them all.

    Also, pretty cool app!

  • kaliszad 6 months ago

    Well, the whole API is bad and the name is wrong. It has nothing to do with history, because you can ever only manipulate the top entries. You don't get an array of objects or simply some kind of list of URLs/ strings, you have to know the specific API to do head of stack manipulation basically.

    And no, this has nothing to do with security. The browser could easily filter the list for same origin even with the list/ array approach. People just need to invent things that could've been just another data structure perhaps with some kind of Compare And Swap wrapper for concurrency.

  • gryn 6 months ago

    I have the opposite problem with twitch when raids happens. please for the love of god keep a history of who was the previous streamer.

blueflow 6 months ago

Its safe for work until you get to the coordinates where they placed the yaoi porn. Obligatory trans flag and Lain are also present....

  • tempaccount420 6 months ago

    In your comment's context, I think "yuri" is more common and fits the next sentence better.

    • blueflow 6 months ago

      You are right, what i was looking at was yuri, but wouldn't know because i went the other way before seeing the genitals.

globular-toast 6 months ago

In case somebody is a second class Internet citizen like me and has no IPv6 support yet, you can set up a tunnel courtesy of Hurricane Electric if you want to play around: https://tunnelbroker.net/

  • remram 6 months ago

    This is often tricky because not all home routers will let you set up the protocol forwarding you need.

    Another option is to use a cloud provider that supports IPv6. For example Google's GCP gives you a completely free VM, the drawback is that enabling IPv6 is a bit of a puzzle. https://cloud.google.com/free/docs/free-cloud-features#compu... (create a dual-stack VPC with a dual-stack subnet in a region, add firewall rules, create dual-stack VM)

  • unquietwiki 6 months ago

    You can also use the one.one.one.one app from Cloudflare; only works on one machine at a time. Tunnelbroker's great, but streaming services consider it an untrusted VPN.

remram 6 months ago

It would be fun to go the other way, make a giant canvas that you draw on based on the sender's IPv6 address.

Obviously it would be a really really big canvas but you could strip some leading or trailing bits.

(If we give 8x8 pixels per /64 and considering that only 2000/3 is used, that's 2^67 pixels)

  • blueflow 6 months ago

    The sender address of a packet is specified by the sender. So the game would be the same, you would just encode the pixel data in a different area of the same packets. Security folks call this "spoofing" but its just an aspect of how networking works.

litbear2022 6 months ago

This reminds me of the IPv6 enabled Christmas Tree[1].Unsurprisingly, the original address has been offline. When I checked the archives, I saw the archives from January 7, 2017[2]. Could it be that some guy is celebrating Orthodox Christmas? :)

- [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13186051 - [2] https://web.archive.org/web/20171201000000*/http://ipv6tree....

Rendello 6 months ago

Cool project. I thought the empty canvas was the galaxy but if you go right, you see a lot of other images. Warning: mostly NSFW.

I wanted to complain, but then I remembered the ol' Hacker News guideline:

> Please don't complain about tangential annoyances—e.g. [...] back-button breakage.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

  • globular-toast 6 months ago

    I thought I was just looking at a landing page and you had to use IPv6 to view the canvas yourself. I think someone just put Hubble deep field at (0,0), though. It looks different now.

imrejonk 6 months ago

Reminds me of the Pixelflut LED display. The hacker camp SHA2017 had one above a bar, 36C3 had one as well. Their traffic peaked at 4 Gbit/s and 30 Gbit/s respectively.

https://hackaday.com/2020/08/01/playing-the-pixelflut/

hobofan 6 months ago

The "no drawing over others people drawings" rule seems kind of pointless, or is nobody supposed to use the website anymore, now that the whole site is covered with a drawing of cat and a lady in a pond?

Thom2503 6 months ago

They also had something like this at TU Twente in the Netherlands, https://pings.utwente.io/ with open-sourced software :)

rkrisztian 6 months ago

Also learn grammar, please. If you mean a canvas based on IPv6, then write "IPv6-Based Canvas". If you mean IPv6 has based the canvas, then write what you just did.

  • jeroenhd 6 months ago

    As the domain name is "openbased.org", and with "based" being Internet slang, I don't think your correction applies. The name describes a based canvas built on IPv6, hence IPv6 Based Canvas.

    The English language is rather particular when it comes to the order of adjectives, but according to https://dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/adj..., "opinion" comes first, and "based" is very much an opinion. I suppose that means the grammatically correct name would be "based IPv6 canvas" if you're being pedantic.

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