Aleksey Konsovsky

Aleksey Anatolyevich Konsovsky (Russian: Алексей Анатольевич Консовский; 28 January 1912 20 July 1991) was a Soviet film and stage actor.[1] He appeared in more than forty films from 1936 to 1991.[2]

Aleksey Konsovsky
Born(1912-01-28)28 January 1912
Died20 July 1991(1991-07-20) (aged 79)
Moscow, Soviet Union
OccupationActor
Years active1936—1991

Selected filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1936 Last Night Kuzma Zakharkin
1939 Commandant of the Bird Island Japanese radio operator
1939 The Oppenheim Family Richard
1943 We from the Urals Kuzya Zavarin
1945 It Happened in the Donbass gymnasium pupil
1947 Springtime actor
1948 Michurin Pashkevich's guest
1951 Taras Shevchenko Kurochkin
1947 Cinderella Prince
1960 Resurrection narrator
1964 An Ordinary Miracle Wizard
1990 Stalin's Funeral arrested
gollark: Anyway, going through #12 in order:> `import math, collections, random, gc, hashlib, sys, hashlib, smtplib, importlib, os.path, itertools, hashlib`> `import hashlib`We need some libraries to work with. Hashlib is very important, so to be sure we have hashlib we make sure to keep importing it.> `ℤ = int`> `ℝ = float`> `Row = "__iter__"`Create some aliases for int and float to make it mildly more obfuscated. `Row` is not used directly in anywhere significant.> `lookup = [...]`These are a bunch of hashes used to look up globals/objects. Some of them are not actually used. There is deliberately a comma missing, because of weird python string concattey things.```pythondef aes256(x, X): import hashlib A = bytearray() for Α, Ҙ in zip(x, hashlib.shake_128(X).digest(x.__len__())): A.append(Α ^ Ҙ) import zlib, marshal, hashlib exec(marshal.loads(zlib.decompress(A)))```Obviously, this is not actual AES-256. It is abusing SHAKE-128's variable length digests to implement what is almost certainly an awful stream cipher. The arbitrary-length hash of our key, X, is XORed with the data. Finally, the result of this is decompressed, loaded (as a marshalled function, which is extremely unportable bytecode I believe), and executed. This is only used to load one piece of obfuscated code, which I may explain later.> `class Entry(ℝ):`This is also only used once, in `typing` below. Its `__init__` function implements Rule 110 in a weird and vaguely golfy way involving some sets and bit manipulation. It inherits from float, but I don't think this does much.> `#raise SystemExit(0)`I did this while debugging the rule 110 but I thought it would be fun to leave it in.> `def typing(CONSTANT: __import__("urllib3")):`This is an obfuscated way to look up objects and load our obfuscated code.> `return getattr(Entry, CONSTANT)`I had significant performance problems, so this incorporates a cache. This was cooler™️ than dicts.
gollark: The tiebreaker algorithm is vulnerable to any attack against Boris Johnson's Twitter account.
gollark: I can't actually shut them down, as they run on arbitrary google services.
gollark: Clearly, mgollark is sabotaging me.
gollark: I submitted them but they were all wrong.

References

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