On Tue, Oct 06, 2015 at 08:55:58AM -0400, Travis Biehn wrote:
It's sort of like voice biometrics - two people can share the same 'feature set' but you and your attacker (the person who has your banking password) are 'unlikely' to.
It's not useful for positive identification by itself, out of that large database there would be many collisions.
The content of text that you type, the words you use and your grammatical structure contain more identifying bits.
Agreed. This might deserve another thread, but is there "English obfuscation for dummies for non-native speakers/writers?" In my native language I suspect can spoof at least one dialect, but in English I am pretty sure I make linkable to me Tpelling/Arammar mistakes. Possible solution might be using relatively small set of words and some Normal Form, but this shows you are using it.