In password security, the longer the better. With a password manager, using more than 24 characters is simple. Unless, of course, the secure password is not accepted due to its length. (In this case, through STOVE.)

Possibly indicating cleartext storage of a limited field (which is an absolute no-go), or suboptimal or lacking security practices.

  • @OsKe@lemm.ee
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    33 hours ago

    At least they tell you. I signed up with websites that just cut the password after the 12th character. No way of signing in with the password again (not without trying a couple of times, at least)

  • katy ✨
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    36 hours ago

    when you varchar(24) and forget about the hash

  • @bunnyBoy@pawb.social
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    1015 hours ago

    One of the accounts that I have to use at my job is like this but much much worse. It only accepts letters and numbers, no capitalization, no symbols and can only be 8 digits long maximum. It’s like they want to account to be easy to compromise.

    • @JcbAzPx@lemmy.world
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      414 hours ago

      That sounds like the limitations of an ancient mainframe system. If so, then someone trying to brute force their way in would be more likely to crash the system instead.

  • @oo1@lemmings.world
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    312 hours ago

    You’ve got to stop all those who put: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

    That’s my password for most things, any hackers die of RSI before they get in.

  • @kepix@lemmy.world
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    2121 hours ago

    i once used 20 for a bank. the website havent told me it was too long just clipped off 2 and accepted the rest. not even the banking support was able to help me. took me a few days to solve this by accident.

    • Nora (She/Her)
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      515 hours ago

      This shit always pisses me off. I’ve encountered it in like 2-3 places over the years since I started using a password manager, and every time it’s so frustrating and hard to figure out.

  • @MolecularCactus1324@lemmy.world
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    571 day ago

    At least they tell you. I’ve had inputs take the full password and then truncate it silently, so you don’t actually know what they saved. Then, you try to login and they tell you wrong password.

    • Liz
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      181 day ago

      I once encountered a system that truncated your submitted password if you logged in through their app, but not through their website. So you would set your password through the website, verify that the login was working (through the website) and then have that same login fail through the app.

    • @Tenkard@lemmy.ml
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      61 day ago

      Yes I’ve had issues with this as well, since I’m a child I’ve set my password generator length at 69 characters… A small trick I’ve found is to delete and rewrite the last character of one of the two repeated passwords since often the validity check gets triggered on write but not on paste

  • Rei
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    191 day ago

    The password should be hashed anyway, which has a fixed output

      • Caveman
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        121 day ago

        Long here means a 400 page book as a password.

          • Caveman
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            117 hours ago

            I think if people have 400 page book long passwords it doesn’t really need a unique hash

  • @TheObviousSolution@lemm.ee
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    521 hours ago

    Some people even suggest typing a longer password over a simpler one with more special characters. It’s harder to brute force.

    • @veni_vedi_veni@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      I thought the use vocabulary lookup tables effectively nullifies the entropy benefits, if everyone started using phrases as password

      • KubeRoot
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        618 hours ago

        Obligatory xkcd.

        I don’t know enough to say how accurate the numbers are, but the sentiment stands - if it’s a password you’re memorizing, longer password will probably be better.

        • Jyek
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          28 hours ago

          That’s not even the case though. Using a memorized passphrase that can be broken down into individual words is susceptible to dictionary attacks provided you know what the length of the password is. You can algorithmically sort away swathes of the dictionary based on how many likely word combinations exist before searching unusual word combinations. The thing is, passwords suck. It doesn’t matter how long the password is, if someone wants in, they’ll crack the password or steal it via some other means. Instead of relying on a strong password, you need to be relying on additional proof factors for sign in. Proper MFA with actual secure implementation is far more secure than any password scheme. And additionally, hardware key authentication is even more secure. If you are signing into an account and storing important data there, you do not want to rely on passwords to keep that data secure.

          The reason for the character limit on passwords is often to prevent malicious attacks via data dumping in the password dialogue box. Longer numbers take more CPU cycles to properly salt and encrypt. Malicious actors may dump as many characters in a password system as they wish if they wanted to take down a service or at least hurt performance.

          Additionally, even if you just used lowercase letters, an 18 character password would take 12 RTX 5090s approximately 284 thousand years to crack according to the recent Hive Systems report.

          24 characters is more than enough to be secure as far as passwords alone go. Just know that, nobody is out here brute forcing passwords at any length these days, there are infinite more clever ways of hacking accounts than that.

      • @Don_alForno@feddit.org
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        17 hours ago

        Assuming the attacker knows it’s a phrase: The english language alone apparently has some 800.000 words. 800.000^6 = 2*10^35 combinations in a dictionary attack. That’s comparable to 18 random ASCII characters. We might also be using a different language, or a combination of languages, or we might deliberately misspell words.

        A long string of random characters will give you more combinations per password length, but there are some passwords you just need to be able to memorize, and I’d say that’s more likely with the 6 words.

  • @mcat@lemmy.world
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    461 day ago

    My worst experience so far was a webpage that trimmed passwords to 20 characters in length without telling you. Good luck logging in afterwards…

    • @drewcarreyfan@lemm.ee
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      341 day ago

      One of my favorite memories of how much Something Awful’s sysadmins were absolutely amateur hour back in the early 2000s was the “lappy” to “laptop” debacle. Apparently Lowtax found the term “lappy” so annoying that he ordered his system administrator to do a find/replace for every instance of “lappy,” replacing them with “laptop.”

      Unfortunately this included usernames and passwords, as well as anything that just managed to have the letters “lappy” in that order anywhere in the word. So, there was one user named ‘Clappy’ who woke up one day to find his name changed to ‘Claptop.’ Apparently this is also how people discovered that they were storing password unsalted in plain text in a fucking MySQL database, which if you’re old enough, you probably already remember that the combination of MySQL and PHPmyAdmin were like Swiss cheese when it comes to site defense. :p

    • @SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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      322 hours ago

      I remember some office software that didn’t accept certain special characters but didn’t tell the user and just accepted the new password. I had to bother IT support many times to reset my password.

    • @Randelung@lemmy.world
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      41 day ago

      Common mistake for amateurs that found a password library and used it without reading the documentation. E. g. bcrypt will tell you to salt and hash the password before digesting it into constant length output for your database.

      Salting before doing anything else is basic password security. I assume the webpage in question doesn’t do that, either.

  • @UpperBroccoli@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    441 day ago

    We have a customer, a big international corporation, that has very specific rules for their intranet passwords:

    • Must contain letters
    • Must contain numbers
    • Must contain special characters
    • No repeats
    • Passwords must be changed every two months
    • Not the same password as any of the last seven
    • PASSWORDS MUST BE EXACTLY EIGHT CHARACTERS LONG

    I can only assume that whoever came up with these rules is either an especially demented BofH, or they have some really really weird legacy infrastructure to deal with.

    • @blacia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      322 hours ago

      I worked in IT for a big national company for a short time. Passwords rules were : at least 8 characters, at least one uppercase letter, at least one number, change password every 2/3 months and different than the 3 previous ones. Several workers had a post-it on the screen with the 4 passwords they use. One of them had name of child and year of birth, I don’t know if it was his children or his relatives’ children too.

    • @drewcarreyfan@lemm.ee
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      201 day ago

      I am a designer, but I once did a project with a very very major and recognizable tech corporation that, no joke, implemented an 8 character limit on passwords for storage reasons.

      This company made in the tune of tens of billions of dollars per year, and they were penny-pinching on literal bytes of data.

      I can’t say who it is, but their name begins with ‘M’ and ends in ‘cAfee.’

      • @Kissaki@feddit.orgOP
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        22 hours ago

        I can’t say who it is, but their name begins with ‘M’ and ends in ‘cAfee.’

        Whoever the company is, we have to assume it’s not a security-related company. Because, surely, none of those would do that ever.

    • Omega
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      141 day ago

      No repeats??? Like, you cant have ‘aaaa123@’ as a password?

      You’re just making it easier to brute force…

      • @ILikeTraaaains@lemmy.world
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        41 day ago

        Since the password has to be changed every two months, I would assume that it means no repeating previously used passwords.

        • @TrippaSnippa@aussie.zone
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          It also says “must not be the same as any of the last seven passwords used” so I can only take “no repeats” to mean no repeated characters.

          Requiring passwords to be exactly 8 characters is especially ridiculous because even if they’re cheaping out on bytes of storage, that’s completely cancelled out by the fact that they’re storing the last seven passwords used.

  • @dQw4w9WgXcQ@lemm.ee
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    231 day ago

    For a system I worked on a few years ago I got the password requirement:

    • Only upper case letters A-Z, no letter or symbols.

    • Exactly 7 characters.

    I was also recommended to make it a single word to make it memorable.

  • 4grams
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    552 days ago

    This shit pisses me off so bad. I had an identity theft a few years back, took ages to undo, and my credit score is still impacted by it. At the time I moved to a password manager and all my passwords are 31 characters of garbage. I’ve got several, highly sensitive accounts that my passwords don’t work for, in fact one a bank, until fairly recently, had repurposed a phone number field in the DB so passwords were limited to 10 characters numeric only (I managed to get one of their IT folks on the horn to explain why the password was so awful).

    I cannot believe we live in 2025 and we still haven’t figured out passwords.

    • DarkSirrush
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      262 days ago

      My bank forces a 6 digit PIN as a password.

      Their 2fa is also email or text only.

      At least we can set a unique username?

      • 4grams
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        62 days ago

        Yeah, I’m up to 40 hide my addresses for that same reason. Figure if the password sucks, at least the email can be unique and obscure.

        • @mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          31 day ago

          I just use a catch-all email domain. It’s functionally similar to a hide-my-email address, except the email addresses are much easier to read and remember.

          Every single email that hits my domain goes to the same inbox. So Target@{my domain} and Walmart@{my domain} both hit the same inbox. And if I start seeing spam addressed to Target@{my domain} then I know Target sold my info. I can easily filter everything to that address straight to spam, with the exception of any senders ending in “@target.com”

          It means my shit gets automatically sorted into neat little folders before it ever even hits my inbox. I can still get the birthday coupons, while all of the spam quietly vanishes into the spam inbox abyss.

          • 4grams
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            21 day ago

            I had delusions of trying to keep track of which address is sold by who which is why I did the hide my email addresses. But I’ve always kept separate personal and spam accounts. This was my attempt at combining to a single account.

            https://xkcd.com/927/

          • @sudneo@lemm.ee
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            11 day ago

            I used to do this, but then why revealing even my domain. I have bitwarden integrated with simplelogin, and I get service_garbage@aliasdomain.tld

            This way I can easily filter with prefix matching (if I want to), but don’t reveal anything at all about me. Also much easier to be consistent, block senders etc. Plus, I can send emails from all those addresses if I ever need (e.g., support).

        • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          168! Don’t hold back - everything gets a unique email address, a generated password, unique username and profile info.

          It’s only the damn phone number that can be used to connect my data. Can’t do anything about that.

          • 4grams
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            21 day ago

            I have a google voice number for that. Most things no longer accept it though.

      • @throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works
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        42 days ago

        Meh, if they lock you out after X attempts, then 6 digits is fine. Hell, even 4 digits is fine if they have a lockout-policy.

        Do they have a limit on attempts?

    • @bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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      122 days ago

      We have figured out passwords. Management hasn’t figured out allocating resources to security, and governments haven’t figured out fining the crap out of such companies.

    • randint
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      21 day ago

      Is there any specific reason to using 31 random characters instead of 32?

      • @Kissaki@feddit.orgOP
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        323 hours ago

        I’m not the one you’re asking, but I’ve had a case where using the maximum number lead to login issues. A character less did not have issues. Must have been an off-by-one implementation issue (maybe a text terminator character). 32 is a power of two number. Seems like a reasonable approach to evade such issues categorically - at the cost of a character by default of course.

        • randint
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          220 hours ago

          Yes, haha, I saw your other comment about this off-by-one issue. Interesting that it happens at all.

      • 4grams
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        21 day ago

        Illogical meat brain that thinks odd numbers are more random that even I guess.

    • Oniononon
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      22 days ago

      all our banks and government systems and may online services work on a governments own 2fa, and there are several variants. They are linked to phone and require inputting Pins. Very comfortable, very secure and very convenient. Also very fast.

      • 4grams
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        32 days ago

        Don’t get me wrong, there are systems that work. I built up a very successful smart card based system many years ago after a failed audit. I initially hated the idea but in the end we built a crazy secure environment that was very easy to use and maintain. That project is long since obsolete but after doing that one, over a decade ago, I figured things were headed in the right direction.

        I think I’m extra sensitive right now because my aging mom has made the issue acute. She’s not the same as she was a few years ago and helping her with all her online accounts has become a nightmare. It’s just too complicated for many folks.