3 pointsby swaraj3 hours ago2 comments
  • benoau3 hours ago
    I think Stripe started it long ago with "pk_" and "sk_" prefixes for public key and secret key.
    • fragmede3 hours ago
      Fun fact! They weren't always prefixed. And then after someone spent hours pouring over the logs in Splunk, that's when they had the idea of prefixing then.
    • swaraj3 hours ago
      that's actually a great reason / explanation. TY
  • Terr_3 hours ago
    I assume it's loose convention intended to identify the string as "Secret Key", as a hint to the humans who might be moving the data around, and maybe to make it easier to write precautionary code like "hey it looks like your commit has a secret key in it, are you sure you want to push it?"
    • swaraj3 hours ago
      this is actually a great idea + reason