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Add sample unbreakable passwords

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Rohan Kumar 2021-01-13 14:18:56 -08:00
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@ -199,6 +199,37 @@ Here are some sample outputs:
If your threat model is a bit smaller, simulate putting a smaller object into the MOAC's furnace. For example, the Earth has a mass of 5.972×10²⁴ kg; this gives the MOAC a one-in-ten-trillion chance of cracking a password with 256 entropy bits and a 100% chance of cracking a 213-bit password.
## Sample unbreakable passwords
According to KeePassXC's password generator, each of the following passwords has en
entropy between 330 and 340 bits.
Using the extended-ASCII character set:
```
¦=¦FVõ)Çb^ÄwΡ=,°m°B9®;>3[°r:t®Ú"$3CG¨/Bq-y\;
```
Using the characters on a standard US QWERTY layout:
```
%nUzL2XR&Tz5hJfp2tiYBoBBX^vWo3`g6H#JSC#N6gWm#hVdD~ziD$YHW
```
Using only alphanumeric characters:
```
tp8D69CGWE5t5a9si5XNsw32CKyCafh8qGrKWLwE6KJHpGyUtcJDWpgRz5mFNx
```
An excerpt from a religious text with a trailing space:
```
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What youre referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux,
```
Don't use actual excerpts from pre-existing works as your password.
## Conclusion/TLDR
Question: How much entropy should a password have to ensure it will never be vulnerable to a brute-force attack? Can the most theoretically powerful computer--the MOAC--crack your password?

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@ -253,9 +253,33 @@ Here are some sample outputs:
- P(326.6) ≈ 1.1×10<sup>-6</sup> (about one in a million)
If your threat model is a bit smaller, simulate putting a smaller object into the
MOAC's furnace. For example, the Earth has a mass of 5.972×10<sup>24</sup> kg; this
gives the MOAC a one-in-ten-trillion chance of cracking a password with 256 entropy
bits and a 100% chance of cracking a 213-bit password.
MOAC's furnace. For example, the Earth has a mass of 5.972×10²⁴ kg; this gives the
MOAC a one-in-ten-trillion chance of cracking a password with 256 entropy bits and a
100% chance of cracking a 213-bit password.
Sample unbreakable passwords
----------------------------
According to KeePassXC's password generator, each of the following passwords has en
entropy between 330 and 340 bits.
Using the extended-ASCII character set:
¦=¦FVõ)Çb^ÄwΡ=,°m°B9®;>3[°r:t®Ú"$3CG¨/Bq-y\;
Using the characters on a standard US QWERTY layout:
%nUzL2XR&Tz5hJfp2tiYBoBBX^vWo3`g6H#JSC#N6gWm#hVdD~ziD$YHW
Using only alphanumeric characters:
tp8D69CGWE5t5a9si5XNsw32CKyCafh8qGrKWLwE6KJHpGyUtcJDWpgRz5mFNx
An excerpt from a religious text with a trailing space:
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What youre referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux,
Don't use actual excerpts from pre-existing works as your password.
Conclusion/TLDR
---------------