I’m just here for a paycheck, not to share my trauma with coworkers I barely know.
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snowsuit2654@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto memes@lemmy.world•What came to mind when I saw that stock photoEnglish6·14 days agoYeah it’s from a series of stock photos but it’s been going around the internet for years. I was just wondering if it had a specific name so I could search for it more easily.
snowsuit2654@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto memes@lemmy.world•What came to mind when I saw that stock photoEnglish10·15 days agoIs there a name for this meme template?
Timberborn is pretty fun and plays quite similarly.
snowsuit2654@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Not my problemEnglish22·28 days agoWhat are the icons? Some sort of AI code products?
snowsuit2654@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•it was him the whole timeEnglish11·29 days agoArtist is Centurii chan
https://bsky.app/profile/centuriichan.bsky.social/post/3lprfgyaous2l
snowsuit2654@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto memes@lemmy.world•Has to be 16 characters, #s, Cap and lower case.English21·1 month agoSure, I agree with you if it’s a password that I expect to have that use case (e.g. streaming service, home wifi network). Most of my passwords don’t though.
As a side note, assuming that they’re equivalent length I would argue that a random password is more secure than a passphrase (of equal length) composed of dictionary words because it’s more resistant to dictionary-based password cracking. That said, the point is moot. As xkcd has shown us, length is the main thing that matters. There’s effectively no difference in practice. I always tell people “the longer the better” in either case and I recommend passphrases for secrets that have to be memorized or typed.
That said, I think an acceptable medium would be to use a passphrase, like you’re suggesting, for a situation where entering it via a controller or remote is a legitimate use case. In fact, my password manager lets me pick and can generate passphrases or passwords. Not sure if that’s a feature in KeePass.
For the rest of the time when I don’t need the use case, I’ll simply generate a long random password using my password manager. It’s a faster workflow integrated into the tool itself and theoretically more secure against some attacks.
snowsuit2654@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto memes@lemmy.world•Has to be 16 characters, #s, Cap and lower case.English21·1 month agoMany (most?) password managers, including KeePass, have a feature to generate passwords directly in the tool.
snowsuit2654@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Adult on the internet ruleEnglish5·1 month agoIt’s pretty funny seeing people complain about this because you know that they enabled this setting and forgot about it.
Only on iOS. Dang, another loss for Android 😢
I use my desktop basically as a temporary directory. I also have icons turned off so I don’t have to see that clutter lol.