Welcome to our New Forums!

Our forums have been upgraded and expanded!

Cyberattacks Against The Forum: Password Change Necessitated

If you need a password change but cannot receive an e-mail, do mail at [email protected]
 
Soaring Eagle 666 [JG said:
" post_id=397294 time=1667447503 user_id=346]
Fuchs said:
A strong PW is 20 digits or longer contains Big Letters, smal ones, Numbers and Special Letters like &. It also should not have a logical connection

like:

!Todayisagoodday666!

the pw below is stronger then the above but much harder to remember.

kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d

One has to find the Middle way between strong PW and the risk off forgetting it. As we should be allways abel to acces our hiden life services.
You know the industry-standard advice well. Too bad it's very misleading. (Not your fault.)

A password like "Green Mimic Convoy Coat Life Why" is also strong. Just as strong as your "kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d". And it's much easier to remember!

(Assuming the words are randomly chosen. I used this password generator: https://passwordcreator.org/commonwords.html)

The strength of a password is calculated by Bⁿ where B is the number of possibilities for each character, and n is the length.

By requiring all those special letters, you increase B. However, increasing n also works. Did you know that "153117066057144157154155077075062067156104127101065144", is just as strong? And it only uses digits! No letters or special characters. Do you want proof? In fact, those digits are your password "kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d", expressed in octal. The information is the same, so the strength is the same. :ugeek:

I´m not an cryptografic expert, I just watched a few theory videos about it, one think I remember was, there is something called dictonary attacks, these make it fare more easy for hackers to hack password-hashes, if the person uses a logical connection or normal words. These dictonary sources are from previous linked hacks, most off the time a summary of most common used words. With this the possibel possibilities are greatly reduced -> less hacking time.

I understand that a number 54 digits can be as save as kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d but for a password as I did mention it is important that you can remember it there for the shorter the better, but it should be also save.

Smart people can extract the database from PW-generators and create new dictionary attacks. Therefore I do not realy like them/would trust only this for a important service. Maybe add a few randoms special letters to it.

I mean the greater the possibel signs used, the harder it is Numbers+Big+Smal Letters+Specials have the biggest possibel range.
 
A good tip is passwords should use un-capitalized and capitalized letters, numbers, and symbols.

So for example using Gibson's GRC password explanation he states after 16 unique letters, numbers, and symbols you can repeat the number, letter, or symbol to harden the password.

I'm not a fan of that I personally believe passwords should be unique to each site and to each person per property.

For example password generators are nice to use to get an idea but do not use them just get an idea from it.

For example Iwenttothemall3 is weak but IwEnTt0h3M@lL3 is stronger.

Still I'd rather do stuff like K3@q#(MdlN9%|~tG. According to Gibson past 16 the very same can be used, again personally not a fan.

According to Gibson K3@q#(MdlN9%|~tG888888888888888. So this 32-length password is extra hardened by numerical might. But I'd still take it to 32 with unique ID letters, numbers, and symbols.

I honestly think passwords are stupid I like a username of course especially for video games and websites. But I think if the Gods were around they'd introduce some sort of soul detection for password or use biometric for example the iPhone 8 the last phone to use touchID if your an apple user. Was greatly missed in fact if Apple ever recreates touchID both at the hardware and software level which they did with their iPads. They'd get a lot of people to use the devices. Many view faceID as stupid and Apple purposefully allowed faceID to be over-engineered.

I don't know about those conspiracies to collect peoples faces and database them. I suppose that is what is happening that is the nature of the beast we are completely helpless against anyone even a random person databaseing peoples faces with their own personal AI/Storage device hell even many security systems of the current era like doorbell cameras are increasingly relying on AI and whatnot.

It seems man is being moved towards communism the darkside of the Age of Aquarius. I just wish I could have a device understand me and keep me from being hacked without a password without writing or typing or keeping things in my head. For some people they seem to have a mentality of this is progress. But I notice over the years password managers and password keeping programs have gotten so popular. Even dual-logging has gotten popular some people logging into multiple websites using facebook.

Let's face is Humanity completely SUCKS when it comes to privacy and keeping data. Look at Reddit datahoarders things you can't even find now a days completely in someones hands because someone doesn't like people knowing stuff. HP.Cobra is right, the over-digitization is only the beginning of shit hitting the fan for some people.

I truly wish what the Gods have isn't more passwords and more remembering and writing down and cracking your head thinking of passwords to make. And everything has to be perfect too that is the funny part passwords are so perfect one mistake and poof the system kicks you back to password beginning.

I think passwords were a byproduct not a requirement from the beginning. Look at many programs from the 60s-70s-80s when computer screens were aiding the use of systems. They barely if ever had any security if anything for us security is a byproduct a nature of the beast situation.

Even the internet even this military this design this massive item was built from the ground up for freedom to use without any security in mind. I mean for fucks sake even the military didn't conceive much security only a half-assed attempt to secure it later. No wonder all those meme movies of look "Da internetz iz ebil 'n' debil".

Yeah no surprise the enemy shat in the sand twisted it up in the sand and threw shit-sand in our eyes during the 70s-80s-90s all those crap movies showing this is the coming evil. I mean hell look at Dale Gribble from King of the Hill or Wargames.

Anyways don't be lazy with cybersecurity write down each password and username and website. Keep it in paper sorta like crypto with cyrptowallet hardware as some require a paper password or poof your money is gone.

Again there should be a system of global internet security with your soul or biometric as password and whatever user name or user IDs you wish to have and just log in whatever easy peasy.

I can see many communists liking this idea especially to expose people. I'm the opposite rather it should be ROEQB(Randomized, Obfuscated, Encrypted, Quantumized, and Binary).(I'm a bigger fan of trinary systems like Thomas Fowler and his address on believing what it might have been if we went Terinary for our computers, -1(negative), 1(positive), and 0(ground/off), balanced terinary -1, 0, 1.)

Unfortunately we got this little called the enemy and we got millions if not billions of idiots following their program. So having this is basically giving communists technologies AND the one rule in world liberation is never give communists technology they just further communize further.

Albeit here we are in our modern age and society is only really starting to move forward now a days. Like Hp.Cobra said Age of Aquarius is going to kick a lot of xtians asses. Especially when they realize just how much technological blowups are happening. It seems more and more are realizing the falseness of xtianity and the blow ups are happening. Look at Ukraine there's incidents of false flag attacks happening and people realizing them.

Anyways I wish we can do away with passwords but it seems that is the nature of the beast. Even 2A is troublesome giving your smartphone number to a company really? you want to surrender your freedom?

Anyways it's all just a cluster fuck it's probably why I gave up joining forums and websites in fact looking back now I'm glad I didn't get too involved with technology and computers back in the previous decade. I had answers for a lot of people in fact my opinion would have helped a lot of people. But man it's like an annoyance. Passwords are just annoying to me.
 
Fuchs said:
Soaring Eagle 666 [JG said:
" post_id=397294 time=1667447503 user_id=346]
Fuchs said:
A strong PW is 20 digits or longer contains Big Letters, smal ones, Numbers and Special Letters like &. It also should not have a logical connection

like:

!Todayisagoodday666!

the pw below is stronger then the above but much harder to remember.

kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d

One has to find the Middle way between strong PW and the risk off forgetting it. As we should be allways abel to acces our hiden life services.
You know the industry-standard advice well. Too bad it's very misleading. (Not your fault.)

A password like "Green Mimic Convoy Coat Life Why" is also strong. Just as strong as your "kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d". And it's much easier to remember!

(Assuming the words are randomly chosen. I used this password generator: https://passwordcreator.org/commonwords.html)

The strength of a password is calculated by Bⁿ where B is the number of possibilities for each character, and n is the length.

By requiring all those special letters, you increase B. However, increasing n also works. Did you know that "153117066057144157154155077075062067156104127101065144", is just as strong? And it only uses digits! No letters or special characters. Do you want proof? In fact, those digits are your password "kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d", expressed in octal. The information is the same, so the strength is the same. :ugeek:

I´m not an cryptografic expert, I just watched a few theory videos about it, one think I remember was, there is something called dictonary attacks, these make it fare more easy for hackers to hack password-hashes, if the person uses a logical connection or normal words. These dictonary sources are from previous linked hacks, most off the time a summary of most common used words. With this the possibel possibilities are greatly reduced -> less hacking time.

I understand that a number 54 digits can be as save as kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d but for a password as I did mention it is important that you can remember it there for the shorter the better, but it should be also save.

Smart people can extract the database from PW-generators and create new dictionary attacks. Therefore I do not realy like them/would trust only this for a important service. Maybe add a few randoms special letters to it.

I mean the greater the possibel signs used, the harder it is Numbers+Big+Smal Letters+Specials have the biggest possibel range.
A dictionary attack is the reverse of a word-based password generator. It reduces the words to numbers. Using that site's table of 9806 words, and my example "Green Mimic Convoy Coat Life Why", a dictionary attack would turn that into "3879, 5479, 1956, 1822, 4993, 9598". There are 6 digits, each with 9806 possibilities. That's 9806⁶ total possibilities, which is 889,101,480,588,360,914,875,456, which is an 80-bit password, which is about 12 random uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols.

Put simply, a dictionary attack only works on short meaningful phrases, not random words. Even if you have the password generator's word list (which I assume here), the security is still strong because of the math.

Yes, making it strong and easy to remember is what's important. The interesting part is that the human mind can remember 8 random words much easier than 18 random characters, yet the strength is the same.

In fact, you could actually represent your "kO6/dolm?=27nDWA5d" using 8 words from that site's dictionary of 9806, by converting each chunk into a number between 0 to 9806. (I would calculate the exact words for fun, if I had more time!) It would literally be the same information, and thus the same strength password, except 8 words are easy to memorize! :D

You're right that using a password generator can be risky. The two risks are a poor random number generator, and a backdoor that logs your password as it's generated. I inspected that site before I posted it, and it's fine. It uses the WebCrypto secure random generator, and makes no web requests at all after you generate the password.

There's also nothing wrong with adding a little something to a generated password. Adding more text will never weaken a password.
 
Henu the Great said:
Password generator (as anything else security related) becomes useless if the computer is remotely controlled, but otherwise, programs such as Keepassxc can be really helpful.
Yes, definitely. People have too many passwords to remember them all, and using a password manage is better than re-using passwords on multiple sites, but the weakness is that, if you get hacked, all your passwords are leaked. A good middle ground is to memorize your most important passwords, like e-mail, Ancient-Forums, etc, and then put the rest in the manager. An e-mail password is extremely valuable because it can often be used for password resets on all your other accounts.
 
Soaring Eagle 666 [JG said:
" post_id=397845 time=1667688395 user_id=346]
Henu the Great said:
Password generator (as anything else security related) becomes useless if the computer is remotely controlled, but otherwise, programs such as Keepassxc can be really helpful.
Yes, definitely. People have too many passwords to remember them all, and using a password manage is better than re-using passwords on multiple sites, but the weakness is that, if you get hacked, all your passwords are leaked. A good middle ground is to memorize your most important passwords, like e-mail, Ancient-Forums, etc, and then put the rest in the manager. An e-mail password is extremely valuable because it can often be used for password resets on all your other accounts.
Or pen and paper...
 
Ludwick said:
Soaring Eagle 666 [JG said:
" post_id=397041 time=1667336912 user_id=346]
It would be best if everyone changes their password to something new. A tiny change like adding "2" at the end does very little to increase security.

To explain the situation simply, what these enemies have is a one-way encrypted version of the passwords (called a salted hash). A hash is very easy to compute in one direction (Password -> Hash), but impossibly difficult to compute backwards (Hash -> Password). All they can do is rapidly guess passwords for a specific user and try to find one that matches the hash. This is expensive to do, and will fail if you used a strong password. (Hence why nothing serious has happened here since 2020.) However, if successful, they will have your password text, so making a tiny change does very little for your security because they can guess obvious simple changes.
Wait so let me get this straight, even though we are among what sounds like the greatest enemy the jew has ever faced/is going to face, they're still not using all that advanced hardware against us?

In theory brute force (aka, password guessing but using soft/hardware imo) will guess all passwords eventually, but for some reason didn't bring us down, they have massive resources but can't seem to use them to enough effect for some reason.

I'm aware that there are forces outside of what I see (like the gods I hope) but just to be certain, how are we still here as opposed to rotting in some FEMA/Walmart gulag?
The Gods is how. They try assassinations, black magic and so on. Most of these get dealt with directly by the Gods. Trust me when I talk you they have tried everything possible to shut us down, from infiltration to everything else you can think of.
 
Soaring Eagle 666 [JG said:
" post_id=397845 time=1667688395 user_id=346]
Henu the Great said:
Password generator (as anything else security related) becomes useless if the computer is remotely controlled, but otherwise, programs such as Keepassxc can be really helpful.
Yes, definitely. People have too many passwords to remember them all, and using a password manage is better than re-using passwords on multiple sites, but the weakness is that, if you get hacked, all your passwords are leaked. A good middle ground is to memorize your most important passwords, like e-mail, Ancient-Forums, etc, and then put the rest in the manager. An e-mail password is extremely valuable because it can often be used for password resets on all your other accounts.

Or just write them down on a piece of paper and keep them away from anything digital.

Barring a fire or some other disaster, you'll have your passwords securely stored out of reach of any hacking attempts.

It's what I do with my most important passwords, and other sensitive things like crypto wallet recovery keys and such.
 
Thank you High Priest HoodedCobra.666,
I logged in yesterday too read a Sermon and was asked to change my password.. ;)

HAIL SATAN!
HAIL MOCHOSIAS
HAIL the DEMON'S Of HELL!
HAIL VICTORY!
 
VoiceofEnki said:
Or just write them down on a piece of paper and keep them away from anything digital.

Barring a fire or some other disaster, you'll have your passwords securely stored out of reach of any hacking attempts.

It's what I do with my most important passwords, and other sensitive things like crypto wallet recovery keys and such.
Writing them down can work too, but I wouldn't just write down the full passwords in plain text. It just seems to be asking for trouble in my opinion. Like suppose a guest comes over and I forgot and left my list out. They could glance at it, and remember some.

Personally, I would do something like write down half of each password, and keep the other half in a password manager. This would have the benefits of both systems, and nearly none of the drawbacks, at the expense of being a bit more inconvenient.

But yes, for most people, writing down passwords is (reasonably) fine. It's probably more of a concern for SS living in oppressive countries under threat of a police raid.
 
Soaring Eagle 666 [JG said:
" post_id=398059 time=1667772456 user_id=346]
But yes, for most people, writing down passwords is (reasonably) fine. It's probably more of a concern for SS living in oppressive countries under threat of a police raid.

These are all very fair points.

As for the passwords, the way I have them written are without any identifier that it is my password, basically just a random string of characters on a paper, no indication what it is for.

Where I keep them is in a private quarter where no guests no come.

Perhaps not an option for everyone, but if you can regulate this and are not at risk of any police raids or other such issues, it can be a very safe bet.

Material risk in my case is nigh 0, so I do keep them this way, as comparatively I feel in my case there is greater risk of any cyber security than a material risk, even if both are minimal.


Your idea for keeping them separated is excellent though, that way no matter what happens, at most only a part of the information is at risk, which is excellent for security.

I do also have my most important passwords memorized, however that is not realistic when you often have to change them, or if using many different passwords, so some way to manage them is definitely always useful.
 
Blackdragon666 [JG said:
" post_id=397869 time=1667695869 user_id=19170]
Ludwick said:
Soaring Eagle 666 [JG said:
" post_id=397041 time=1667336912 user_id=346]
It would be best if everyone changes their password to something new. A tiny change like adding "2" at the end does very little to increase security.

To explain the situation simply, what these enemies have is a one-way encrypted version of the passwords (called a salted hash). A hash is very easy to compute in one direction (Password -> Hash), but impossibly difficult to compute backwards (Hash -> Password). All they can do is rapidly guess passwords for a specific user and try to find one that matches the hash. This is expensive to do, and will fail if you used a strong password. (Hence why nothing serious has happened here since 2020.) However, if successful, they will have your password text, so making a tiny change does very little for your security because they can guess obvious simple changes.
Wait so let me get this straight, even though we are among what sounds like the greatest enemy the jew has ever faced/is going to face, they're still not using all that advanced hardware against us?

In theory brute force (aka, password guessing but using soft/hardware imo) will guess all passwords eventually, but for some reason didn't bring us down, they have massive resources but can't seem to use them to enough effect for some reason.

I'm aware that there are forces outside of what I see (like the gods I hope) but just to be certain, how are we still here as opposed to rotting in some FEMA/Walmart gulag?
The Gods is how. They try assassinations, black magic and so on. Most of these get dealt with directly by the Gods. Trust me when I talk you they have tried everything possible to shut us down, from infiltration to everything else you can think of.

Spending big amounts off resources, to bring a totaly open site down, that works within legal scoope, is also like advertising it. If they spend too much, other people will wonder why.

Also there is no legal background to do this.

Because off the two reasons above, I estimate they only do rather smal and short attacks on the sites, as far as I know.
 
Thank you! No wonder my password went all weird recently.

We have such an amazing clergy! The best there is in fact.

I've been a little paranoid about cybersecurity because:

1.) Everything on the internet is permanent.
2.) Things like even our writing style can be an identifying feature.

I will not be using Windows anymore and I'll be taking that good advice on using a VPN and Tor.

The thought of getting harassed by big-nosed cretins doesn't sound appealing and there seem to be a lot of targeted individuals these days on the net getting microwaved, gangstalked, bombarded with noise, sabotaged property, etc.

Best not leave such outcomes to chance I think.
 
OHHHHH my, im back hopfully some missed me. Tech not my strongest point.

Hope all is well.

Will read our HPs threads. Loook forward to it.


Glad we still strong, never in doubt HPHC bro sending my best brother.
 
I am not sure whether this happened for my mistake or it's happening again, when I login I get an error then on the 2nd attempt it works.
It was happening on regular basis some weeks before the cyberattacks, I did not understand why at the time. Just informing if helpful.
 
WARNING
Again today this happened.
I carefully checked I entered correct username and pwd. 1st login attempt returns "The submitted form was invalid. Try submitting again.". 2nd attempt logs me correctly in.
This happened for several weeks before cyberattacks was found and this post appeared. I suggest to check again.
I truly hope I am wrong but it seems like something is not working fine again.
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

Back
Top