1
|
Rinny   United States. Jan 08 2017 23:59. Posts 600 | | |
|
|
4
|
TianYuan   Korea (South). Jan 09 2017 05:19. Posts 6817 | | |
Thx for the heads up =.= Good thing I don't use that pw for anything important. |
|
|
|
1
|
whamm!   Albania. Jan 09 2017 05:28. Posts 11625 | | |
oh my 11111111 will surely get fucked |
|
|
1
|
lucky331   . Jan 09 2017 09:06. Posts 1124 | | |
whamm please dont post my LP password. LOL |
|
|
3
|
PuertoRican   United States. Jan 09 2017 09:41. Posts 13030 | | |
|
|
|
1
|
nolan   Ireland. Jan 09 2017 15:27. Posts 6205 | | |
i've had to change my 2p2 pw like 7 times in the last couple years and i barely ever post there ffs
edit: "Passwords were encrypted/hashed but anything relatively easy to guess has been decrypted."
Someone who understands computers can explain this better? A hashed PW that was 'dog123' is easier to decrypt than one that is 'Eg73k2pau371ZcV' ? Why/how? |
|
On September 08 2008 10:07 Baal wrote: my head is a gyroscope, your argument is invalid | Last edit: 09/01/2017 15:29 |
|
|
5
|
Meat   . Jan 09 2017 16:06. Posts 3385 | | |
| On January 09 2017 14:27 nolan wrote:
i've had to change my 2p2 pw like 7 times in the last couple years and i barely ever post there ffs
edit: "Passwords were encrypted/hashed but anything relatively easy to guess has been decrypted."
Someone who understands computers can explain this better? A hashed PW that was 'dog123' is easier to decrypt than one that is 'Eg73k2pau371ZcV' ? Why/how? |
It's because they are not decrypting but brute force attempts by going simply through every possibility. Also if they didn't take certain actions it's possible to compare passwords in rainbow tables, these are tables with encrypted passwords. |
|
|
1
|
Stim_Abuser   United States. Jan 10 2017 01:50. Posts 7499 | | |
| On January 09 2017 14:27 nolan wrote:
i've had to change my 2p2 pw like 7 times in the last couple years and i barely ever post there ffs
edit: "Passwords were encrypted/hashed but anything relatively easy to guess has been decrypted."
Someone who understands computers can explain this better? A hashed PW that was 'dog123' is easier to decrypt than one that is 'Eg73k2pau371ZcV' ? Why/how? |
They basically use a giant list of common passwords like dog123 and use a program attempt all the possible passwords in that list to each account.. So the more unique your password the less likely it is to be in the giant database of possible passwords so the less likely they'll get a match on your account. |
|
Hey Im slinging mad volume and fat stackin benjies I dont got time for spellin n shit - skinny pete | |
|
|
1
|
FrinkX   United States. Jan 10 2017 03:45. Posts 7561 | | |
sigh i dont remember my 2+2 password im sure its similar to my others tho ugh
lolol i used to brute force "illies" on brood war, names with characters that could no longer be created like !@$ etc. i had some sick ones like (+.+)(-.-)(+.+) Q{'.'Q} lolol. so many koreans pws were 1111 or 1234 or A or something |
|
bitch on a pension suck my dong | |
|
|
|