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Just making “second breakfast” your password would be more secure.
Relevant XKCD: https://xkcd.com/936/
59 4 ReplyIs it though? Because I it's the same amount of characters
10 2 ReplyBut there are 12 possible characters rather than 10 which increases the problem space.
12 0 ReplySorry, what do you mean by 12 characters?
6 1 ReplyAll numbers in a passcode means 10 possible values for each position: 0-9. Just the letters in the phrase “second breakfast” include 12 possible values at each position which means mathematically there are more possible solutions.
7 1 ReplyBut the attacker wouldn't know about that. He does not know if the password is just characters, numbers etc...
15 0 ReplyI was thinking about that because probably the first world on these dictionaries is "password"
3 0 Reply
Speaking of not knowing things, how do you know the attacker's pronouns?
8 1 ReplyThis made me laugh pretty hard for some reason. Thank you.
5 0 Replygot me
2 0 Reply
Where do you get the 12 from? Alphabetical is 26 variations per character, not 12.
7 0 Reply
Do it with the caps and lowers intact. Add spaces and you’ve got an unbrute-able password.
4 0 Reply
No, it would be far less secure than it already is in weakly obfuscated form.
4 1 Reply