[Klug-general] password testing/cracking

Adrian junglelee345 at yahoo.co.uk
Tue Mar 26 12:20:44 UTC 2013


Has anyone seen this website? (generating passwords)


https://www.passwordcard.org/en



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Today's Topics:

   1. Re: password testing/cracking (Colin McCarthy)


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Message: 1
Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2013 07:54:31 -0400
From: Colin McCarthy <binarysignal at gmail.com>
To: Kent Linux User Group - General Topics <kent at mailman.lug.org.uk>
Subject: Re: [Klug-general] password testing/cracking
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    <CAChEnngJaTkrL7QW-bEtLPsv7tvh3_WYYbgt47krzZ44Qg0b3g at mail.gmail.com>
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On 26 March 2013 05:53, Dan Attwood <danattwood at gmail.com> wrote:

> https://xkcd.com/936/
>
> is probably as good as explanation as you'll likely to get
>

I use a combination of words like this system. It's surprisingly easy to
remember a 16+ character password that way.

This article although incredible long is extremely interesting on the
subject of passwords
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2012/11/ff-mat-honan-password-hacker/all/

It does not matter now long your password is if it's still easy to trick a
machine or Apple agent into resetting your account.



>
> On 26 March 2013 09:42, james morris <jwm.art.net at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On 26 March 2013 07:07, Gary Yeames-Smith <gary at hotel-media.tv> wrote:
>> > Another method for password creation is to create a long memorable
>> sentence
>> > and then take the 1st letter of each word. This results in a easy to
>> > remember password which looks completely random to other people.
>>
>> Why not use the memorable sentence itself? You've still got the first
>> letter of each word, but as additional work, all the rest of them too
>> ;-)
>>
>> Which is what I wanted to investigate but I've got a bit stuck as I
>> haven't yet managed to crack such blinders as 'crackmenow'.
>>
>> And as far as memorable sentence creation goes, I'd take a leaf out of
>> William S Burroughs' book, and how memorable sentences are constructed
>> by the holders of record-breaking memory feats. Suggest seemingly
>> nonsense sentences which have some sort of private/internal
>> logic/association too it to the user who came up with it.
>>
>> Which will still be far too much for my parents to cope with.
>>
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