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January 27, 2007

No, the title of this post is not a bug. It’s a reasonably secure password (not one that I use, thankfully).

You may remember when security expert Bruce Schneier wrote last month about the passwords people tend to choose for their MySpace accounts. You may’ve even chuckled at the one in a thousand who chose “blink182” as a somewhat conspicuous key to their online existence. But don’t be so quick to consider yourself completely secure.

Schneier recently wrote another piece, examining the techniques that password crackers now use to reveal “offline” passwords – the kind that unlocks your OS, as opposed to the kind required to log into a website.

Essentially, as long as the password is stored on the computer in some form, it’s possible to compromise it. (No server would accept 350,000 guesses per second for the same password, which is why online passwords aren’t quite as vulnerable.) Through brute-force means, it’s possible to scan the entire hard disk and try everything that fits in the password field. If you have a thousand dollars to spare, that is: you need some serious software to do that.

The article does get a bit technical at times, but it makes for a great read, even for computer illiterates. At the least, it gives you a little respect for human ingenuity.

Ever wonder who’s writing all those Wikipedia entries? You know, the ones on topics that no sane person should have ever conceived of, let alone write about? Well, now you know:

A slightly creepy loner who has been frightening women in his neighbourhood by hanging around their houses and trying to talk to them about military history and Star Wars has been ordered by a judge to serve his community service on Wikipedia.

That’s why professional reference works always maintain suitably high standards for contributors, for instance requiring at least a JD in Information Architecture to land a gig in the publisher’s mail room. If that story ruffles your feathers, this site may well lead you to swear your allegiance to the Encyclopædia Britannica.

Hat tip to Guy Chapman for the scoop, and of course to Wikipedia for, well, being easy to link to.

Between my f2o account shattering into pieces a month ago and me getting sick these past few weeks, I haven’t gotten much time to slog through the backlog of e-mail, blog subscriptions, and Facebook friend requests (not to mention homework), so please stay on the line while I respond to my tasks in the (reverse) order in which they were received.