The world's most secure password for websites, games and private data.
The world's most secure password for websites, games and private data. Researched and developed by leading encryption specialists in Europe: https://mostsecure.pw # Bonus For Fun: xkcd - "Password Strength" https://xkcd.com/936 ------- "Don't let anyone rob you of your imagination, your creativity, or your curiosity. It's your place in the world; it's your life. Go on and do all you can with it, and make it the life you want to live." - Mae Jemison
From: Cecilia Tanaka <cecilia.tanaka@gmail.com> Subject: The world's most secure password for websites, games and private data.
The world's most secure password for websites, games and private data. Researched and developed by leading encryption specialists in Europe:
https://mostsecure.pw Yes, it did look very good! I think I'll begin using it for all my websites and computers! Jim Bell
On Thu, Jun 22, 2017 at 11:49 PM, jim bell <jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Cecilia Tanaka <cecilia.tanaka@gmail.com> Subject: The world's most secure password for websites, games and private data.
The world's most secure password for websites, games and private data. Researched and developed by leading encryption specialists in Europe:
Yes, it did look very good! I think I'll begin using it for all my websites and computers!
<irony> Oh, Jim, I'm so happy you appreciated this amazing site! It's an excellent idea to use it for all your sites, computers and bank accounts, my dear! I will do exactly the same right now! :D </irony>
PS: - We should ask to ZH if it works, haha!! He's the kind of guy that *really* would use this site. :))) I was joking, not presenting the CP list a 'wow-amazing-miraculous passwords generator', hahahaha!!! ;D Take care, Jim. I don't like all of your opinions but respect you. :)
The one password they could never divine is \epsilon\epsilon. Two empty strings in a row. Now I can see how some of you might object that it's then just one empty string in whole. I disagree: whoever told you passwords have to obey normal monoidal string axioms? Quite certainly arbitrary amounts of non-visible, un-greppable, in-representable void between and on characters *will* prove an un-stoppable counter-measure. https://xkcd.com/936/ Truth be told, every *nix installation really should have available 1) a commonly available dictionary, 2) a true/hard randomness source (don't go there), 3) an easily usable means of combining your own off-the-cuff source of randomness with whatever you get from your hardware, 4) a cryptographically speaking hard mixing function, and 5) a stupid-as-fuck freeware utility to fold all of that into an XKCD-hard password. Preferably the lot residing in its hard parts on your Android device's tamper-resistant whatchamathinga, with open interfaces and a dozen or so independent implementations of each part. Of course you can attack something like that. Duh. But compared to what we have now, it'd be a total hoot. -- Sampo Syreeni, aka decoy - decoy@iki.fi, http://decoy.iki.fi/front +358-40-3255353, 025E D175 ABE5 027C 9494 EEB0 E090 8BA9 0509 85C2
On 06/22/2017 08:21 PM, Cecilia Tanaka wrote:
The world's most secure password for websites, games and private data. Researched and developed by leading encryption specialists in Europe:
# Bonus For Fun: xkcd - "Password Strength"
Give me the xkcd method any day. I am really lousy at memorizing gibberish. That reminds me, I need to finish polishing up the Forth code I use for making passphrases/passwords and get it out there. -- Shawn K. Quinn <skquinn@rushpost.com> http://www.rantroulette.com http://www.skqrecordquest.com
On Fri, Jun 23, 2017 at 10:25 AM, Shawn K. Quinn <skquinn@rushpost.com> wrote:
I am really lousy at memorizing gibberish.
If you do want gibberish, it's hard to beat pwgen: $ pwgen -y -s -1 64 7(5Ip]cZZas745u5y;9zm/)^IG%j~1/DUd\d#k*T4tA3EI%C_AKZh#4^Et0h#/b+ $ pwgen -1 32 Shaegh6Caewu4woyoaCohluj1Yee7ya5
participants (5)
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Cecilia Tanaka
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Jason McVetta
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jim bell
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Sampo Syreeni
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Shawn K. Quinn