On 25/12/15 06:19, Ineiev wrote:
> I assume the amount of entropy is what really matters. for instance,
> if on every next step you are free to choose any of 4 random words
> taken from 6-word dictionary, you may put it in a grammatically
> correct form[*], then you must get a certain entropy
It's about the randomness/unpredictability/entropy of the passphrase.
There are less grammatically correct sentences with 4 words than there
are combinations of 4 words in total.
So, yes, you can take a sentence that makes sense, but then the whole
passphrase has to be longer. There is an
On 24-12-2015 17:02, Matthias Apitz wrote:
> I do not fully understand why some 4 random words like
>
> Correct, horse! Battery staple!
>
> is a better passphrase like, for example
>
> Und allein dieser Mangel und nichts anderes führte zum Tod.
I do know that using accented
On Friday 25 December 2015 18:41:30 Matthias Apitz wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I read that I should self-sign my pub key, but when I do this after
> creation, it says:
>
> $ LANG=C gpg2 --sign-key Matthias
>
> pub rsa2048/AA1EF4741F9046D4
> created: 2015-12-25 expires: never usage: SC
>
I'm a big fan of that list, and for some time I've been meaning to generate
a tweaked version that uses binary numbering, having recently needed to
generate a passphrase without a dice to hand. Using a coin and rejection
sampling isn't too hard, but it's rather annoying to have to throw away 20%
On 17-12-2015 21:29, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> http://www.technologyreview.com/news/544516/user-error-compromises-many-encrypted-communication-apps/
Signal assumes TOFU, and warns if the key is changed. That can have a
ligitimate reason (new installation), or indicate an attempted mitm
attack.
Hello,
I read that I should self-sign my pub key, but when I do this after
creation, it says:
$ LANG=C gpg2 --sign-key Matthias
pub rsa2048/AA1EF4741F9046D4
created: 2015-12-25 expires: never usage: SC
trust: ultimate validity: ultimate
sub rsa2048/D6AD2EFF41863FE4
On Thursday 24 December 2015 17:02:54 Matthias Apitz wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I do not fully understand why some 4 random words like
>
> Correct, horse! Battery staple!
>
> is a better passphrase like, for example
>
> Und allein dieser Mangel und nichts anderes führte zum Tod.
>
> i.e.
On Fri, Dec 25, 2015 at 10:57:06AM +0100, Peter Lebbing wrote:
> On 25/12/15 06:19, Ineiev wrote:
> Let's assume one in four words in the dictionary fits the grammar. I
> hope this concurs broadly with what you assumed. Rather than pick four
> random words of the full list, and then pick one of
El día Friday, December 25, 2015 a las 06:50:07PM +0100, Ingo Klöcker escribió:
> > Und allein dieser Mangel und nichts anderes führte zum Tod.
> >
> > i.e. some phrasing which could be memorized better?
>
> The second sentence is found by search engines (2 hits in DuckDuckGo). Don't
> use
If you want a simple random list, look at diceware:
http://world.std.com/~reinhold/diceware.html
Both the page and the diceware lists are available in many languages,
including German
vedaal
___
Gnupg-users mailing list
Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Matthias Apitz wrote:
> El día Friday, December 25, 2015 a las 06:50:07PM +0100, Ingo Klöcker
> escribió:
>
> > > Und allein dieser Mangel und nichts anderes führte zum Tod.
> > >
> > > i.e. some phrasing which could be memorized better?
> >
> > The second sentence is found by search
Hi,
do you have an estimate on the number of unique sentences published on
the Internet?
Sincerely,
Malte
___
Gnupg-users mailing list
Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
13 matches
Mail list logo