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Cleverness Appreciated

November 26, 2008 12:20am

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  • #1 / Nov 26, 2008 12:20am

    Kurt Deutscher

    827 posts

    Every once and a while you run across something just a little bit geeky that just makes you smile.

    Today while setting up some new member accounts using the company’s existing usernames and passwords I got to about 6 members setup and suddenly my poor tired brain noticed something that made my day.

    Here’s a sample from the list:

    rswanson
    5w4n50n

    jastlley
    45tll3y

    fmounts
    m0unt5

    hlarson
    l4r50n

    krotela
    kr0t314

    ssanchez
    554nch3z

    bsinger
    51ng3r

    ttrownbridge
    tr0wenbr1dg3

    Perhaps not the most secure system ever conceived, but a bit of fun and still hard to guess.

    yes, the names have been altered to protect the members, but you’ll get the idea if you look at the list for a minute.

  • #2 / Nov 26, 2008 12:55am

    stinhambo

    1268 posts

    Trowenbridge is the only name who’s vowels haven’t been totally substituted with a number?

    And they have basically substituted their surnames to number/letter combination.

  • #3 / Nov 26, 2008 1:09am

    Kurt Deutscher

    827 posts

    There were others with a slight bend in the rules, but for the most part they kept to the pattern. Not as much fun as finding one of Paul’s hidden treasures in EE’s code, but at the end of a day of MX, SPF, IP’s and client support calls related to freshly launched sites, it was a fun surprise.

  • #4 / Nov 26, 2008 1:16am

    stinhambo

    1268 posts

    Not as much fun as finding one of Paul’s hidden treasures in EE’s code

    Pray tell…

  • #5 / Nov 26, 2008 1:18am

    Kurt Deutscher

    827 posts

    Nope, my lips are sealed. 😉

  • #6 / Nov 26, 2008 6:52am

    Neil Evans

    1403 posts

    if i were a hacker attempting to guess a password… apart from a dictionary attack with numbers included, i would try combinations of username / words with the logical letters replaced by numbers.  So maybe not as secure as you might think, but still better than what my average customer asks for “password” as the password!

  • #7 / Nov 26, 2008 7:29am

    stinhambo

    1268 posts

    So what are the most common passwords then?

    What about things like 111111 or 12345 or pet names and birthdays etc?

  • #8 / Nov 26, 2008 7:51am

    Sean C. Smith

    3818 posts

    I have 5 passwords that I use and after the oldest password is about 12 months old I phase it out for a new one. The least secure is 8 characters with 2 numbers randomly thrown in - most have 10 characters with mixed case, at least 2 numbers and one symbol.

    don’t understand people using passwords such as their spouses name or birthdate - you’re just asking to be hacked and ripped off.

    perhaps I’m just a little paranoid.

  • #9 / Nov 26, 2008 8:15am

    Neil Evans

    1403 posts

    i don;t know about common, but a lot of people i know go for related words, plus a number. so for example a dog site - “fido123456”...
    I just think people (customers!) do not know (or care to find out) why passwords are weak, hence they always go for words, or birth dates.

    I say bring on open ID… then once you loose that password you loose everything!

  • #10 / Dec 01, 2008 10:35am

    GDmac - expocom

    350 posts

    Ha, this made me immediately think about following userfriendly.org cartoon.

  • #11 / Dec 01, 2008 10:45am

    Ingmar

    29245 posts

  • #12 / Dec 01, 2008 5:45pm

    Todd D.

    460 posts

    N080dy c0u1d 3v3r gu355 my p455w0rd5!

  • #13 / Dec 01, 2008 5:53pm

    Mark Bowen

    12637 posts

    N080dy c0u1d 3v3r gu355 my p455w0rd5!

    -... . -  -.——- ..-  -.-. .- -. .——. -  —. ..- . ... ...  —.. -. .  . .. - .... . .-.

    😉

  • #14 / Dec 01, 2008 6:10pm

    Todd D.

    460 posts

    Hmmm

    Betn — —tucane — —et —euess —ineeither

    You could get a job in seafaring.

  • #15 / Dec 01, 2008 6:13pm

    Mark Bowen

    12637 posts

    Unfortunately the forum scrunched it all up though, dahs (dashes) got turned into longer dashes (don’t know what they’re called though - maybe daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahs? 😉 )

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