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Where is this password database from?
In general, the thing is. In a hurry, I entered my password in the wrong place, and chrome found it for me on the Internet. in the open. Here: pastebin.com/LQNNCgmu
As you can see, there is a hash, and then a password. Even the most persistent, like "5tgb7ujm6tfc", where I include mine. So very surprised.
Googling the link itself does nothing.
In general, all the author's pastes are approximately the same: pastebin.com/u/SmilingWolf
None of the guests know where this could be leaked from, maybe flashed somewhere?
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And this is a far from easy guy. Hash specialist. A fan of his craft :)
1) forum.md5decrypter.co.uk/viewprofile.aspx?UserID=220
2) forum.md5decrypter.co.uk/topic1188-l34k3d0u7-and-3di5h4rm0ny.aspx
3) forum.md5decrypter.co.uk /topic218-found-passwords-2.aspx
4) hashcat.net/wiki/wpa_clean_and_convert_script
5) hashcat.net/forum/thread-637.html
Even the most persistent, like "5tgb7ujm6tfc"
I would use a password generator and store like keepassx. I have only two 16-digit passwords, the rest of 25 characters is enough.
About 5 years ago, there were archives with password dictionaries, complete with brute force for password-protected archives. It looks like the author brings this dictionary to different hash types.
well, this is not quite a strong pass ... OnScript
also wrote about durability , and a strong password is 16 characters (numbers, letters of different case, special characters).
And this base is not really a base ... these are the “bazenkas” of one “maniac”. Maybe they are then stored somewhere, but the story is silent about this.
And as Amadeusck correctly noted, the guy is not an easy one. Having climbed the tyrnets, I noticed that the person is quite respected in the circles of "hashers" and the like.
found similarly here: hash-killer.com/dict/8/7/4/d
most likely it is rainbow tables.
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