this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2024
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Privacy
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Super long passwords aren't going to do you any good when their database is compromised and sold to anyone with a few bucks.
Its not like some one is gonna be brute forcing your account password, it would lock your account after like ten tries.
Quite the contrary.
Password hashing is standard nowadays.
When a database is compromised, brute forcing hashes is necessary to recover passwords, and the short ones are the first ones to be recovered.
So what? They'll get your single use randomly generated password months/years/decades after you've already changed it?
Which begs the question, how often do people really change their passwords unless they're forced to? This feels like the sort of thing that somebody should have studied.
If its not been pwned then why bother? As long as you're using a password generator and only using per a service passwords plus MFA youll be fine
sounds like a great way to DoS people's accounts, especially if you don't want them to be able to see what you're doing