Just finished building my key. :D Thinking about doing another one, but this one took me nearly 5 days to build. It's slow to load, but it's so cool to use. :D
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Just finished building my key. :D Thinking about doing another one, but this one took me nearly 5 days to build. It's slow to load, but it's so cool to use. :D
So cool in what way? Being a complete waste of time? Encoding something with a key that big is a total waste.Quote:
Originally posted by James
Just finished building my key. :D Thinking about doing another one, but this one took me nearly 5 days to build. It's slow to load, but it's so cool to use. :D
-MrD
You could send your credit cards number in plain .txt format over the net without worrying!
The biggest encryption key I've seen used in a standard format is 4096-bit. You would likely be replacing the server before a password cracker could crack it :) No need to go over that.Quote:
Originally posted by James
Just finished building my key. :D Thinking about doing another one, but this one took me nearly 5 days to build. It's slow to load, but it's so cool to use. :D
Eric
Well, it wouldn't really be plain text if it was in an encrypted shell.Quote:
Originally posted by DAoC
You could send your credit cards number in plain .txt format over the net without worrying!
-MrD
I wouldn't advise doing that! One can easily capture and assemble into dialogs all packets transiting a subnet.Quote:
Originally posted by DAoC
You could send your credit cards number in plain .txt format over the net without worrying!