We've had 1st-factor authentication, but what about 2nd-factor?
125 1 ReplyHahahaha
12 2 Reply
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 ReplyDo 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
Why use actinium over argon?
22 1 Replyi don't think brearkfaste has the same pronunciation 😂
22 0 ReplyThis is ar good point
6 0 Reply
Flavour
20 3 Reply'cause noble gases are elitists, they won't mix with these other plebs at all
2 0 ReplyAll the good letters argon
2 1 Reply
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh man this is a - g o o d - m e m e -
17 2 ReplyYou guys give your friends your passwords?
13 0 Replyhunter2
11 1 ReplyAll I see is
*******
12 0 Replyclassic stuff
2 0 Reply
The WiFi password?
2 0 Reply
It's actually not very secure if it's just numbers, but honestly nobody's trying to bruteforce your wifi these days.
12 0 Replyappend and/or prepend any special character and voilà, it's a very strong passwd
4 0 Reply
This just made me realize how much of a pain it is to spell words with the abbreviations of elements.
12 1 ReplyYou think they had to throw out some early potential titles for Breaking Bad because they couldn't make the logo work?
6 0 Reply2-2!
4 1 Reply
I used to have these two cats that were rapidly losing weight due to several health issues they both had.
I used to make that joke all the time whenever they gave me the "hungry eyes" after I already feed them their wet food.
Someone in the house would say "You two already had your breakfast" and then I'd say "We've had one breakfast, yes. What about second breakfast?" with the thick accent that the line is spoken with.
8 0 ReplyThat's strange, that's the same combination I have on my luggage!
6 0 ReplyDo people realize dictionary attacks aim specifically at these word passwords?
5 1 ReplyBut it has an extra e at the end so 100% more secure
12 0 Reply
Perfection!
2 0 Reply1 0 Replyused to string together phone numbers
1 0 Reply1 0 Reply