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Full Discussion: Storing Passwords
Top Forums Web Development Storing Passwords Post 302928984 by Corona688 on Tuesday 16th of December 2014 04:57:08 PM
Old 12-16-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
Regarding keys -- When not in use (ie standing somewhere) the half-keys should be encrypted - both on the user side and the system side. Otherwise they are sitting ducks.
How does one avoid the rube goldberg problem, though? That being, extra encryption/decryption steps where the server knows its own key gains nothing but extra heat and wasted time.
Quote:
Whenever someone cracks your code for the key encryption algorithm, then they win. Period.
How so? Knowing the algorithm won't get them the keys.
Quote:
Unless forward perfect secrecy is mandated take a value-based approach.
I'm not storing financial information, it's more of an admin tool.
Quote:
If somebody can reverse engineer code, or get your source easily, then most things you can do are pointless.
Again, how? Knowing the algorithm does not hand them the keys -- it tells them what they need to steal, but does not give them access.
 

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LESSECHO(1)						      General Commands Manual						       LESSECHO(1)

NAME
lessecho - expand metacharacters SYNOPSIS
lessecho [-ox] [-cx] [-pn] [-dn] [-mx] [-nn] [-ex] [-a] file ... DESCRIPTION
lessecho is a program that simply echos its arguments on standard output. But any metacharacter in the output is preceded by an "escape" character, which by default is a backslash. OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. -ex Specifies "x", rather than backslash, to be the escape char for metachars. If x is "-", no escape char is used and arguments con- taining metachars are surrounded by quotes instead. -ox Specifies "x", rather than double-quote, to be the open quote character, which is used if the -e- option is specified. -cx Specifies "x" to be the close quote character. -pn Specifies "n" to be the open quote character, as an integer. -dn Specifies "n" to be the close quote character, as an integer. -mx Specifies "x" to be a metachar. By default, no characters are considered metachars. -nn Specifies "n" to be a metachar, as an integer. -fn Specifies "n" to be the escape char for metachars, as an integer. -a Specifies that all arguments are to be quoted. The default is that only arguments containing metacharacters are quoted SEE ALSO
less(1) AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Thomas Schoepf <schoepf@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). Send bug reports or comments to bug-less@gnu.org. Version 487: 25 Oct 2016 LESSECHO(1)
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