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The Justice Department wants to force Apple to write software that would allow the government to try millions of random password combinations to get into the phone.
I know this is no substitute for a really strong password like one you would get from a random password generator, but realistically, how many of those jumbles can you remember?
The service has no easy "front door", instead being buried deep in the settings menu, which means if you need to actually find out what the random password you just assigned is – say, to log in on a non-Apple device – you'll be clicking for a while.
A handy tip is to visit random.org and use their random password generator.
Consider a set of online nodes, each protected with a random-one-time-password, under a ∥-attack using random password attempts, with equal frequency in all nodes.
I opened his phone (no password!), calmly set a random password, and put the phone back down and went back to referee the Rose/Adelson "discussion".
Similar(45)
> with the fact that users rarely choose random passwords.
Can help you generate strong, secure, random passwords.
What: Once you've got your password manager, use it to generate secure random passwords for you, rather than trying to invent your own.
Apple's Safari, for instance, will happily generate random passwords when signing up for new accounts, then store them in iCloud Keychain.
They generate random passwords and store them in an encrypted safe, to which only you have the key, usually in the form of a master password.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com