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by moe
4188 days ago
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No, SHA-256, the way you use it, is not "far too slow for brute-force". To anyone reading here: Please do yourselves a favor and stay away from BOTH SuperGenPass and from this one. They are nearly equivalent to using the same password for every website. A malicious website owner can derive your "master password" from the hash that you gave them and thereby gain access to all your websites. |
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That's an extraordinary claim. (I'm not gonna argue too strenuously about MD5 being somewhat dangerous in this context, as it is very easy to find collisions...slightly harder to find the exact passphrase, particularly if it is a very long/strong passphrase. A collision in this context is not enough to break the usage.)