@ThomasPornin Oh yes I know that :) I was using gorillas as an example of a socially behaved primate, which I think monkeys would fail, if provide for a more entertaining comical effect, true that ;)
The origin of three-factor authentication paradig is unknown, but one thing is for certain: it predates mankind. Controversial? Let's see. Ask yourself, how does e.g. a father gorilla recognize a newborn cub as being one of his offspring, even if its mom is not around? By something it has - a sme...
I used one of those unanswerable questions... could be it's also because of that, it's not been seen many times since my answer
In ant colonies, specialized ants act as guards and prevent other ants from entering some areas unless they "present" the appropriate, colony-specific pheromone. This is the password model, and ants have been doing that since (at least) mid-Cretaceous, 110 million years ago. So I daresay that the...
@ThomasPornin I think that your answer has some entertainment value also due to the way readers see your attitude towards what they believe is a ridiculous question in the first place. It wasn't accepted by OP, so that shows somewhat that you've poked his self-respect a little, which readers possibly also found funny?
Well, I did :)
@ThomasPornin Oh you see but you used cars later in your analogy... cars obviously work also... someone suggested combining monkeys and cars in answers for ultimate rep gaining effect before:
If you merge a chimp analogy with a car analogy, you may produce the ultimate rep-winning strategy... — Deer HunterApr 2 at 19:45
For protect your login page you can use this service Colobe
It is a free service that protects your pages by any brute force attack.
Anyway colobe requires the PHP in your server.
It is very cool because colobe is a dynamic service that learn during the time and builds a global blacklist of the...
This reads as a specific product endorsement to me, with so many different web application level filtering products out in the wild, and this one merely mentioning one specific product out of ... probably thousands?
@Ladadadada well it's just another remote API CBL, like so many of them... Even I have my own (not selling it, tho). But I don't see any case for selecting this particular product (that is even paid for over 5000 API calls par month) over so many other, better tested and a lot more used APIs like this, that are free to use regardless of the number of API calls. At the very least he (they?) could include some stats and expected performance numbers, if anyone is to fall for it.
@Ladadadada Well I gave it my -1 but I expect it to be later deleted by mods, even I have limited patience with answers like this, even tho it's kinda fun to mock it :)
I have been interested in Information Security. I was recently introduced to the idea of hashing. What I currently understand about hashing is that it takes the password a user enters. Then it randomly generates a "hash" using a bunch of variables and scrambling everything. Then when you enter th...
Why can't a password hash be reverse engineered?
I've looked into this ages ago and have read lots on it, but I can't find the explanation of why it can't be done. An example will make it easier to understand my question and to keep things simple we will base it on a hashing algorithm that doesn...
@Gilles well yes, but problem is OP does not understand that they're one way, and he split his question in three points, so it would be a dupe of three other questions. Not sure how to go about with these type of questions, I've seen many that weren't closed even if they were called as dupes by others, just because they had a part in it that was different enough from other questions. SO if full with such questions
@ThomasPornin I don't think Griffin will be able to make the link from “We do not want one hash function, but many distinct hash functions” to “If they are generated randomly (even if two passwords are the same they come out differently) how can they tell if it's correct?”
@Gilles Actually I don't think Griffin will understand any of the answer before a thorough cleansing of the layers of misconceptions that have apparently accumulated on his mind; and this will take time.
But answers are not for the OP only; they are also for the Internet at large.
Why don't they understand they can up-vote more than one answer, even if they can accept only one? Is there some way we could promote voting more often? It might not be so much of a problem on Sec.SE, but I've seen many SE sites that suffer from low vote count. What's the word on how to improve users' voting habits?
While we're on the subject, I was wondering if this -1 rep cost for down-voting answers ever disappears with some reputation score, or is that same for all?
OK Griffin is learning, finally up-voted @ThomasPornin's answer too, after some convincing why that matters :)
@Gilles see my previous reply ;) I just didn't get it, I thought these things are supposed to be hidden from us, and that some error caused it to disclose its internal structure. Had no clue that's public too. :( I'm learning...