95 standard keyboard chars x 16 randomized yields 2^105+ which
isn't likely to be a real crack risk given the rest of the platform.
They're just hard to memorize. Longer word based entropy of
the same strength will likely be hard to memorize as well.
Consider adding in other key material factors/so
On Fri, Feb 14, 2014 at 02:45:06PM -0500, Michael Carbone wrote:
> On 02/14/2014 01:54 PM, Nathan Freitas wrote:
> > On 02/14/2014 12:06 PM, Jack Murphy wrote:
> >>
> >> I've considered buying an android smartphone, but I've held off in
> >> the past because the max password length was a crackable
On 02/14/2014 01:54 PM, Nathan Freitas wrote:
> On 02/14/2014 12:06 PM, Jack Murphy wrote:
>>
>> I've considered buying an android smartphone, but I've held off in
>> the past because the max password length was a crackable mere 16
>> characters in length.
>>
>> Does anyone here who's running Jel
On 02/14/2014 12:06 PM, Jack Murphy wrote:
>
> I've considered buying an android smartphone, but I've held off in the past
> because the max password length was a crackable mere 16 characters in length.
>
> Does anyone here who's running Jelly Bean know what that max password length
> for devic
Hi.
I've considered buying an android smartphone, but I've held off in the past
because the max password length was a crackable mere 16 characters in length.
Does anyone here who's running Jelly Bean know what that max password length
for device encryption is these days?
Thanks,
Jack
--
tor-t