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Link to TLDR at the top
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(This is a long post; there's a TLDR near the bottom.)
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This is a tale of the intersection between thermal physics, cosmology, and a tiny amount of computer science to answer a seemingly innocuous question: "How strong does a password need to be for it to be physically impossible to brute-force, ever?"
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This is a tale of the intersection between thermal physics, cosmology, and a tiny amount of computer science to answer a seemingly innocuous question: "How strong does a password need to be for it to be physically impossible to brute-force, ever?"
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Note: this post contains equations. Since none of the equations were long or complex, I decided to just write them out in code blocks instead of using images or MathML the way Wikipedia does.
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Note: this post contains equations. Since none of the equations were long or complex, I decided to just write them out in code blocks instead of using images or MathML the way Wikipedia does.
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@ -15,6 +15,8 @@ This is a tale of the intersection between thermal physics, cosmology, and a tin
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amount of computer science to answer a seemingly innocuous question: "How strong does
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amount of computer science to answer a seemingly innocuous question: "How strong does
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a password need to be for it to be physically impossible to brute-force, ever?"
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a password need to be for it to be physically impossible to brute-force, ever?"
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[TLDR]({{<ref "#conclusiontldr" >}}) at the bottom.
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*Note: this post contains equations. Since none of the equations were long or
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*Note: this post contains equations. Since none of the equations were long or
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complex, I decided to just write them out in code blocks instead of using images or
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complex, I decided to just write them out in code blocks instead of using images or
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MathML the way Wikipedia does.*
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MathML the way Wikipedia does.*
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