How does an attacker find out how long your password is, if you don't tell them? I'm open to the idea that maybe somehow that can be done through some trickery, but I don't see how.
d
deprecated_ii@poa-st.mostr.pub
npub15fke...j9gr
540,000 IQ bellybutton inspector
ᓚᘏᗢ
extremely peaceful
☧
I've never understood this claim but I've seen it quite a bit
like, maybe this could be an extremely specific attack on an individual known for some phrase, but otherwise, you're not doing a successful dictionary attack on a long password just because it's a sentence in more or less proper english
even if you claim there's some loss of randomness due to the patterns of letters and spaces -- which is true -- that's more than offset by how easy it is to remember and type out an *extremely long password*
"and so mary said, bring me a cup of orange juice with my toast"
good fucking luck pal


not allowing spaces in passwords seems like a pretty big red flag that the underlying code is crap
>get up
>back doesn't hurt at all
it's a christmas miracle

just saw a wireless mouse being marketed as having very quiet clicks
...which I suppose has to do with zoom meetings and stuff
so is this why the last logitech mouse I bought had unusably soft buttons that were super easy to accidentally click and had minimal tactile feedback 😒
if wpa2 is so great why's there no wpa3
...oh, there is


I got a TI-84 and it supports python (for some reason)
it seems it has an ARM coprocessor specifically for that purpose




kinda sad that I can recognize most locations in skyrim from a few seconds of footage




