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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • Plenty of people have told “original” stories.

    Stories that are popular can be legal rip offs from something that is vaguely similar but never gained much exposure. So, what?

    “I told a story that the world is familiar with and has sufficient relevance to the issues of today but nobody heeded the warning”

    “uhh, yeah, but it wasn’t original”

    My remark was self indulgent and totally as[s]inine, but I’m just saying something too, where’s my pass?

    Sorry, I guess you probably have made a significant contribution that’s relevant to this glaring issue in society that we’re all trying to come to grips with?

    The internet doesn’t act as a single cohesive entity

    No, but a significant portion of it does act as a single, cohesive entity. Enough to perpetuate memes into popularity that glorify one and simultaneously villify another.

    That’s self evident.







  • At least the picture can convey the protest message so they know we aren’t going to move past it that easily.

    As if that means anything to them?

    You’re a minority.

    don’t go to reddit other than to spread to good word of Lemmy and to downvote admins so I think that has more benefit to us than to them.

    Reddit admins ABSOLUTELY RUINED by frequent EXPLETIVES and DOWNVOTES









  • graphite@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.worldPasswords
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    1 year ago

    but I was trying to imply, in a properly generated password, 32 digits long is very secure.

    I understand, and I think you make a valid point as far as the discussion is concerned.

    It’s unfortunately still a little more complicated than that, though.

    Like I said, there’s more to a password than length and symbol type.

    Even something like cF*+@aXbIdFHje2vZiU-1 is less secure than if it were generated by a good PRNG.

    D0@ndro!dsDr@3@m0f3l3ctr!cSh33p? is also insecure, though it might have been considered secure 4-5 years ago.

    You see what I’m saying?

    Then of course there’s hash algorithms and how those are used to authenticate the passwords themselves, etc.


  • graphite@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.worldPasswords
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    1 year ago

    32 is a damn strong password

    Not necessarily: only if it’s generated properly, and only for the moment - that will change in the next few years.

    You do realize that length and symbol type are only 2 out of many other factors that go into a strong password?