- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
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Not him but I know people who use poems and quotes as passwords. Those can easily go for more than 71 characters because there’s a good reason to do it. It essentially guarantees a password that can’t be bruteforced without any additional information and it’s easier to remember than random symbols.
70+ may seem much but it’s good practice to have a password as long as possible, assuming you can remember it.
Could also be generating passwords and cranking that password length there to max.
Ding ding ding. I am moving to 100+ char passwords for sites that support it. There is absolutely no reason to ever have a maximum character limit for passwords, and it drives me insane that some sites still use asinine limits like 12 (!) character maximums.
I started with 20, then 40, and now 60 moving to 100+ or whatever the max is for websites. I have been hacked long ago and I’ve been the target of discrimination and personal attacks of many types before, so I’ve ratcheted up my security hard in the last decade.
Anything above 20 characters is effectively overkill. It will never be brute forced.
I’m sure you’re using a password manager so it doesn’t matter if it’s 20, 70 or 300 characters, but still … it makes no sensible sense to insist on the ability to use passwords that long.
Never is a strong term; currently, in most cases. But another 5, 10, 20 years it might be completely different. If I can set up passwords that I don’t need to change until I’m dead*, vs scrambling because a new tactic has been found to crack passwords 50x as fast… why not go with the ‘once and done’ approach? Especially when it’s a slider inside a generator that takes a couple seconds to adjust.
*assuming no breaches or other situations yada yada some conditions may apply visit longasspasswords.netgovxyz for details
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