  EGeezer Go Bobcats Premium join:2002-08-04 Country! | reply to NetWatchMan Re: Stupid User Tricks: Password Selection - "WORD1"
I'm thinking about using dictionary passwords, but encrypted in ROT-26. Twice as secure as ROT-13 ... |
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  av8r I'd Rather Be Flying Premium join:2002-06-14 Boca Raton, FL clubs:
| While ROT-26 is certainly twice as secure as ROT-13, I have found that encoding once, and then encoding the encoded password is more effective. Double ROT-13 should be used as a minimum. I will admit, I have not yet tried Double ROT-26. -- If I am not for myself, Who will be for me? If I am only for myself, What am I? If not now, When? -- Hillel |
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  David No,there is another. Premium,VIP join:2002-05-30 Granite City, IL clubs:
·DIRECTV
·magicjack.com
·AT&T Midwest
| Well if I may offer this little diblet this is the best password generator I have seen and seems to work rather well.
»www.pctools.com/guides/password/
Now there is no excuse as to why the myspace croud can't create a more complex password. -- If you have a topic in the direct forum please reply to it or a post of mine, I get a notification when you do this. Koetting Ford, Granite City, illinois... YOU'RE FIRED!!
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  alanhdsl Premium join:1999-10-09 Phoenix, AZ
·Qwest.net
| Those may be good passwords, but now you're inviting a yellow sticky note with "3REfrure" written on it.
The challenge is that good passwords are hard to remember, so people either pick simple ones and/or write them down. I'm not sure there's a good solution. |
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  PolarBear The bear formerly known as aaron8301 Premium join:2005-01-03
·CableOne
| But it's VERY hard for a MySpace phishing bot to get the password from the yellow sticky note on the side of your monitor. Or any hacker, for that matter. All you have to worry about is the FBI raiding your house, and your evil little sister... -- A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention, with the possible exceptions of handguns and Tequilla. -- Mitch Ratcliffe |
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  AB Premium join:2006-04-04 Leesburg, VA
1 edit | reply to alanhdsl said by alanhdsl :Those may be good passwords, but now you're inviting a yellow sticky note with "3REfrure" written on it. The challenge is that good passwords are hard to remember, so people either pick simple ones and/or write them down. I'm not sure there's a good solution. Actually, the only challenge is to use something that's complicated, unique, and easy to remember-- or to discover if forgotten. Sound tough? Not so! (Provided long passwords are allowed, at any rate.)
An example: #MoM:(555)893-12743215#
This is my mother's phone number (obviously not really) followed by her street address number. All I have to remember, besides the phone number and street address, is that I use a lower case 'o' (or upper case 'm's) at the beginning along with a colon, and surround it with 'pound' signs. Or I could put 'MoM' at the end instead of the beginning if I wanted to. And of course my mother's phone number & street address are things that I'm likely to have memorized anyway. As well as that they are easily recovered should I forget them.
The point is that this is a very complicated password that's also not very difficult to remember, therefore negating any need to write it down. All of my important passwords are structured similarly, and are written down nowhere-- certainly not as passwords, at any rate. I've always found this to be a quite workable solution.
For stuff like logging into newspaper sites, it's 123 or whatever, because who cares?
Now, getting someone to actually spend the 5 or 10 minutes it takes to come up with a decent password is an issue of it's own.  |
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 Mele20 Premium join:2001-06-05 Hilo, HI
| The problem with long passwords, and especially all those numbers, is that you can't see what you are typing. Way too easy to transpose numbers. I'd probably type that a dozen times and never get it right and some sites only allow three attempts. I only use complex passwords for banking sites and didn't do it for them until recently.
There is no reason to x out passwords on the screen if the user isn't somewhere that others look over his shoulder or take photos from a distance. I always have wondered why that is done. That should be something that a user turns on if they need it otherwise what you are typing should show up on the screen. I'm always mistyping a password, even one that is not complicated and that I have typed many times, and it irritates me that I can't tell what I am typing. -- "The same ferocity that our founders devoted to protect the freedom and independence of the press is now appropriate for our defense of the freedom of the internet. The stakes are the same: the survival of our Republic". Al Gore, The Assault on Reason |
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  caffeinator Coming soon to a cup near you.. Premium join:2005-01-16 Spokane, WA
·WebBand
| I use "normal" length and complexity passwords on the average sites, althought I don't use anything less than 8 chars and mixedcase with numbers.
I have a textfile for the really long ones like banking and Paypal.
Those ones are mixed-case alphanumeric with symbols and over 12 chars long. (one is over 32chars)
I Copy/Paste 'em, so no worries. 
-CaFF -- "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." - A. Einstein
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  nwrickert sand groper Premium,MVM join:2004-09-04 Geneva, IL
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Midwest
| reply to Mele20 The problem with long passwords, and especially all those numbers, is that you can't see what you are typing. My most important passwords are, I hope, hard to guess but easy enough for me to remember. There are very few of these.
For the rest, the passwords are in an encrypted file (actually an encrypted email to myself). I can decrypt, then cut and paste, to be sure I type it in correctly. The encryption pass phrase is one of those "most important passwords." -- AT&T dsl; Westell 2200 modem/router; SuSE 10.1; firefox 2.0.0.4 |
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 Mele20 Premium join:2001-06-05 Hilo, HI
| Gee, mine are all in two different folders. One for banking and another for all other passwords. All passwords for the past more than 8 years are there...lots and lots of them. It is quite irritating to have to go look up a password every time I have login somewhere. The one for here is the only one I remember. I wish a fingerprint thingy worked with Fx...I think those still work only with IE.
I never have understood why I can't turn offthe hiding of the password I type. There is no one here to see it so why can't I turn that off? I should be able to do that. It should be turned off by default for home users seems to me. -- "The same ferocity that our founders devoted to protect the freedom and independence of the press is now appropriate for our defense of the freedom of the internet. The stakes are the same: the survival of our Republic". Al Gore, The Assault on Reason |
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  Owlbet Ignite the Ice Premium,MVM join:2002-09-24 Palmer, AK clubs:
·MTA Online
| reply to PolarBear said by PolarBear :But it's VERY hard for a MySpace phishing bot to get the password from the yellow sticky note on the side of your monitor. Silly move on my part but done out of convenience for another adult member of my household: I wrote the user name and password for our router on the top of the router.
I recently had DTV installed. The first thing I did after the installer left was change the password on the router and black out the information I had previously written on it.
The other adult member now carries a laminated business card in his wallet with the router information on it. |
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  angussf Premium join:2002-01-11 Tucson, AZ
| reply to caffeinator said by caffeinator :I have a textfile for the really long ones like banking and Paypal. IIWY I would get some sort of encrypted password store instead of a text file. I use a Palm device, so I use YAPS with the YAPSviewer program on my desktop that allows me to cut-and-paste from the datastore. There are other packages, including OSS ones like KeePass Password Safe »keepass.info/ so cost shouldn't be a concern here. That way you memorize ONE long complex password (to the password database) and look up all the rest, yet if someone steals your computer / laptop / PIM device, you haven't lost anything. |
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  technick Premium join:2000-12-16 Loganville, GA
| reply to David said by David :Well if I may offer this little diblet this is the best password generator I have seen and seems to work rather well. » www.pctools.com/guides/password/Now there is no excuse as to why the myspace croud can't create a more complex password. I use this on the fly for my users, works well and most of them are easy enough to remember.
At one point a few years ago before I found the above website, I used a program called pwgen, I believe it was in the debian apt repos. -- "Our greatest glory consists not in never falling, but in rising everytime we fall." - Confucius
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  caffeinator Coming soon to a cup near you.. Premium join:2005-01-16 Spokane, WA
·WebBand
| reply to angussf said by angussf :IIWY I would get some sort of encrypted password store instead of a text file. I use a Palm device, so I use YAPS with the YAPSviewer program on my desktop that allows me to cut-and-paste from the datastore. There are other packages, including OSS ones like KeePass Password Safe » keepass.info/ so cost shouldn't be a concern here. That way you memorize ONE long complex password (to the password database) and look up all the rest, yet if someone steals your computer / laptop / PIM device, you haven't lost anything. Yeah, that's true..I should try that at some time.
In my situation, it's not much of a risk, as nobody else is ever here, and it's only a couple passwords. Also, they're not easily identified as such, just a couple lines amongst 100's of lines of other text.
I know what line it is, but others wouldn't. 
Most all of my website passwords are kept in Opera's Wand.
(yeah, I know it's only MD5 hashed and can be recovered easy enough, but the chance of anyone getting to my computer three flights up in a locked security building is slim.)
Could my system be penetrated? Maybe, but it hasn't happened yet in 15 years.
Besides, I have no money in the bank to take, no CC's, no credit, Nada. GL with stealing my identity..it'd be of no use to anyone. The only time I ever worried was when I got my wallet stolen awhile ago...much more bothersome than worrying over computer passwords IMO.
Simply put, I don't live like "normal" folks, so a lot of those rules aren't needed for me.
Thanks for mentioning it though. 
-CaFF -- "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." - A. Einstein
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  Drunkula Premium join:2000-06-12 Denton, TX
·Verizon FIOS
| reply to EGeezer ROT-13? ROT-26? Not very secure at all! Actually I never heard of ROT-26 but wouldn't that be the same as not encoding it at all? If there are 26 characters in the English alphabet and you 'rotate' to the character 26 ahead don't you end back right where you started from (it is a rotate and not a shift)?  -- Go away or I will replace you with a very small shell script. |
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  caffeinator Coming soon to a cup near you.. Premium join:2005-01-16 Spokane, WA
·WebBand
1 edit | said by EGeezer :I'm thinking about using dictionary passwords, but encrypted in ROT-26. Twice as secure as ROT-13 ... Oh, JFYI, here's an online tool to encrypt/decrypt a piece of text according to the algorithms ROT5, ROT13, ROT18 or ROT47
»netzreport.googlepages.com/onlin···_47.html
-CaFF |
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  av8r I'd Rather Be Flying Premium join:2002-06-14 Boca Raton, FL clubs:
| reply to Drunkula said by Drunkula :Actually I never heard of ROT-26 but wouldn't that be the same as not encoding it at all? Sorry - neglected the [sarcasm] tags  -- If I am not for myself, Who will be for me? If I am only for myself, What am I? If not now, When? -- Hillel |
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  AB Premium join:2006-04-04 Leesburg, VA
| reply to Mele20 said by Mele20 :The problem with long passwords, and especially all those numbers, is that you can't see what you are typing. Way too easy to transpose numbers. I'd probably type that a dozen times and never get it right and some sites only allow three attempts. I only use complex passwords for banking sites and didn't do it for them until recently. There is no reason to x out passwords on the screen if the user isn't somewhere that others look over his shoulder or take photos from a distance. I always have wondered why that is done. That should be something that a user turns on if they need it otherwise what you are typing should show up on the screen. I'm always mistyping a password, even one that is not complicated and that I have typed many times, and it irritates me that I can't tell what I am typing. Sounds like a PEBKAC issue. |
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 Mele20 Premium join:2001-06-05 Hilo, HI | What's "PBEKAC"? |
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  AB Premium join:2006-04-04 Leesburg, VA
| said by Mele20 :What's "PBEKAC"? Is that what I said? I thought I said "PEBKAC".
Google is your friend (well, my friend anyway.) 
»en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PEBKAC |
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