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Show HN: ShadowCat – file transfer through QR Codes in a Browser

62 pointsby unprovabletoday at 11:11 AM26 commentsview on HN

Comments

divantoday at 2:04 PM

This method of animated QR data transfer is quite efficient with fountain codes. I had PoC implementation back in the day - Txqr [1] [2]

[1] https://divan.dev/posts/animatedqr/

[2] https://divan.dev/posts/fountaincodes/

Recently I rewrote it in Dart/Flutter and finally implemented RaptorQ codes (way more efficient than Luby used in original Txqr). Testing it internally now, prepareing Appstores/GooglePlay/Web deployment and new article.

lukew3today at 12:07 PM

You should turn on github pages so we can see it live. Seems cool but I’m not at my pc rn

unprovabletoday at 11:13 AM

Single page file transfer using QR Codes and a browser. Sending device loads a file into the page, gets chunked. Receiver gets all the chunks through a camera, tosses lightly and reassembles, CRC to garnish. Designed to push data from an old phone that had broken comms after it took a swimming lesson in a coffee mug, it's been quite handy.

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anhldbktoday at 12:38 PM

I also implemented a static web with that idea: https://github.com/anhldbk/get-beam

acrophiliactoday at 2:49 PM

What's the length limit? I tried pasting some text and got this message: code length overflow. (85700>18672)

MattCruikshanktoday at 12:52 PM

I've wanted to use this for an air-gapped communication device.

I have a device with a camera and a touch-screen that only uses capacitive charging. I type a message. Bytes are encrypted. I hit send. QR codes flash on my screen. I use my PC or my normal phone to receive the encrypted bytes, and transmit them to you. You have the same device. You have your PC or phone flash encrypted QR codes. You use your device to receive, and then decrypt.

I've daydreamed about also buying several different hardware random noise generators. XOR all of their bits together. Save a huge one time pad to each of our devices. And then also use public key crypto on top of it.

I'm not really sure why I want this. But, it's my answer for how to reduce attack surface as much as possible, and have truly secret messages.

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hootztoday at 12:13 PM

I love this type of stuff. Some years ago I did something similar, but instead of QR Codes it used a convoluted mess of audio frequency modulation to send data through sound between devices. This is much more practical if you have two cameras.

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tripflagtoday at 12:42 PM

Cool! Out of curiosity, since qr-codes can contain binary data -- rather than base64, have you tried inserting the file as-is? That way you could do away with the ASCII separator and have a binary header as well. This would spend less frames for the same amount of data, but I'm not sure if it would be computationally cheaper. The other alternative would be the alphanumeric mode of qr-codes, but then you lose lowercase.

thedougdtoday at 12:58 PM

I've done this exact approach before. It's a good way to exfiltrate data. Post the software on GitHub pages, or a popular CDN that co-hosts other shared libraries and you've got a very difficult to block method.

Really goes to show that it's very difficult to stop a motivated and informed actor.

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hoansdztoday at 12:33 PM

I once heard someone create a QR code scanner to retrieve gigabytes of data, but the biggest problem is that cameras aren't powerful enough to handle it all. Essentially, the QR code needs to be downloaded to the device for loading; relying on the camera to retrieve it is very difficult. Am I wrong about this project? What's your solution?

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alex_suzukitoday at 12:54 PM

Cool stuff. I’m fond of the “single HTML file” deployment option.

villgaxtoday at 12:19 PM

What would make this truly portable is being able to generate this consistently with a short prompt and generate with a local LLM. That way no network calls or file hash can prevent this

fizza_pizzatoday at 2:45 PM

[flagged]

MarStudiotoday at 1:06 PM

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