literally everyone can do it but everyone will not really act to do it because its dumb and the people who buys that is stupid too..like the site is the one that makes the password secure not the password itself
But the client won't say which password for what account. It may be for Twitter or Tumblr. She doesn't know that. Heck, she might not even know their username or email address. How can she hack them?
There are some people in the comments saying that this girl actually isnt stupid for doing this because she gets paid. But thats not my point. In saying the people who *buy it* are kinda stoopid
@@bonex1205 you really think a hacker will Come to úr House. Hell no. But ur friends might find it or ur mom. So just hide it somewhere we're nobody ever looks
Wallus The One you want a good password here you go : XxZJ Laird go fab he FB UV few hours Gmail FB HTC he all KS exactly us so enjoy he Karl RN ms us. Your welcome
@@andrewlee4353 scammers are shat on because they are the ones who convince people (specifically older boomers who have no knowledge of tech) to give up all their life savings for some nonsense. This girl isn't calling anyone up and asking them to avail her "service". There are idiots out there who genuinely believe that she's doing something big and pay her for it.
@@quazimodo619 lol dude but she's just scamming. Anyone with common sense knows that Google can make a strong password for you. Along with this video teaching you how to make on and password/ number generators that exist. It dosen't matter if she's a child. We aren't going to waste money on stupid shit
Imagine when she finds out you can make a simple algorithm that generates passwords infinitely faster and with a half hour of labor and some coding knowledge
@@sapna6717 I realize what the point is; making this video is equivalent to a toddler making a shitty dinosaur drawing and the toddler’s uncle buying the drawing then a video is professionally produced to make it seem as if it was some sort of genius business model
Infamous Fuzzle I mean if people paid somebody 2€ for creating their username so they can have an edgy n cool username on a free site/app : Facebook or Instagram...
Infamous Fuzzle lmao I'm sorry there isn't an app that you can use to change comments you wrote before, so nobody notices you got triggered by the response that made you trigger. Oh btw in the app there wouldn't be the word EDITED like on RU-vid :)
People say "hate" is a strong word, so the word "hate" is my password. For some reason, my computer says "Password strength: Weak." I think my computer is broken.
Why buy a password? Just type any word and press spacebar after that as many times as you wish and remember that. No hacker can manage to login no matter he cracks the passowrd or not.
Smash your head on the keyboard and it's unhackable now OJYLZDZXLYJZ 5LHAEPHHAEO HAEKTAETO AHA ETHIEAYOSRYBKAYHAOEHOQETHAOETH AETHAOTWHAOETVAOETV OTE GA ETD AETVAEKVATJVAJEB A4JTQ3OH AEYHOA46OJARYJ46JPW47JLDYJPARVJQRYLALETB OF ETABOWTGOHQWTOA3YQOERG AHTLATEHLAE THE AETHAOTWHAOETVAOETV LEHTALDGJARLYALRYJSRYLJARYJLSYRNLSYRJVOWRHORYHWO4YWOYJWOETVOEWTHTHOSETJ2*×*1LE1XKAkqs*zj1ed2exje&÷'2exe2jex2&$=k2rdl2edl2rf2rdke2*'÷2÷3*2&wdzjdwx&r÷#2$*1☆○ csaari hk
@@King-nq3nc who says I'm SPEAKING English? Edit: The problem with his sarcasm is, anyone with knowledge about this can tell it's not true. If you wanna make a sarcastic comment, at least make sure it's valid. That way your joke will also look smart. Edit 2: everyone after this comment didn't take the last line for its intended meaning and thought I was insulting the OP. So, I had to change the line to properly convey the meaning intended.
Can't believe you're stupid enough to call it a random generator if it isn't random. It's a moot point either way, though. A password just has to be unpredictable enough.
Z file Not found Her system is random... a random generator is not random computers can't be random they follow a rule set you learn this first semester of uni
Uh, that wouldn't make it invulnerable to, it will be more easy since the computer just had to try the dictionary once. She's creating passphrases, they have a insane amount of possible combinations
Running this business seems like a really good way to learn statistics in a hands-on manner. Randomness, distributions, and noise all manifest themselves in the passwords she creates. Good for her.
A lot of people here suggest just mashing their keyboard, but the passwords in the video are obviously supposed to be memorable as well (though a password generator online would do this for free). Each password she makes is is six words chosen from a predefined library of ~100,000 words (pause video on 1:02), so 1e5 ^ 6 = 1e30, or 1 nonillion differs. Not bad for a purely alphabetical password. It's true that this is basic cryptology that anyone can figure out, but my point is that it's a little more than some of these comments do justice.
She said she rolls a die 5 times for each word, and a password consists of 6 words. (6^5)^6 = 6^30 ~ 3e23 She rolls two dice in the video each time, but at 1:02 the digits that are shown to not go above 6, so I assume the two dies being rolled are meant to be independently used.
1) speaking from a modern point of view, the number of permutations isn't actually important for security past a certain point. for example 6 digit pins that many banking systems use only have 1 million permutations {000000-999999}. rather it's all about layers of security, for example 2FA, or password locking after several tries, or ATM machines "eating" the card. So having a long password doesn't really do anything much if at all. 2) I want to echo Vadim on the digit only going up to 6, and dice being independently used, because if you combined the dice, you would end up with a lot of 7s because of how dice work. if you used two dice together this would happen 1/36 of the time you get "2" (1+1) 6/36 of the time you get "7" (1+6, 2+5, 3+4, 4+3, 5+2, 6+1) 1/36 of the time you get "12" (6+6) and your generated password would be heavily biased towards the middle numbers. 3) Also I chuckle at the fact that there's a note saying to remember to salt the passwords, but all her passwords are in plaintext on paper. Clearly some adult set this up for her to have fun.
@@helmeren3828 tl;dr passwords being overcomplicated is useless. instead, set up extra verifications like one time passwords and limit the number of tries.
lol people who paid $2 for a password are kind of dumb tbh. She could at least do something productive and smart, not taking people's money for a silly password when you can just smash your keyboard and make a very secure password like this: 48p-7rf3dc[jio]i0c985y493e4ehu/;rejio[rnjfkvo]90=-8y
@@theblah4341 I was not suggesting that she guesses the customers interests at all...I was merely saying instead of being given a randomly generated password, the customer could provide some things that they might like incorporated into the password to make it easier to remember, and then a password could be created around those things.
@@delta-w8h Yeah, my point being that I think the customer could skip the hassle of sending their interests to her and just make it themselves since they know their own interests better. I'm not shitting on you or the girls idea (Honestly I think she's pretty smart for coming up with all this, though it may seem kinda dumb to pay for a password) just saying it's kind of redundant. Please I beg you don't make this a stupid online argument
@@theblah4341 At the same time the customer could also just generate a random password using one of the many free websites that do this and get the same outcome. So yes either way this business ends up being redundant, I was just suggesting a way it could be improved upon.
"not easy for the computer to hack" You're using a predefined dictionary of 7776 words. Any computer could just brute force through those. The basic idea of Diceware is incredibly flawed.
you're not supposed to use just one of the words generated. you use 6 words as one passphrase. that's 7776^6, or 200 thousand billion billion possible passphrases. there's no brute forcing that.
I think you underestimate how large 7776^6 is. Even if you found yourself a processor that goes through, say, 200 thousand billion (200000000000000) passwords a second, you will still have to let it run for a billion seconds (30+ YEARS) to try all combinations.
[GD] Gerv'd Any customer of hers would probably be dumb enough to request this service, using their email. Besides it's not too difficult to find emails these days with a simple google search of your name. And unless you are paying her in bitcoin or something (which is unlikely) then she is likely to know your name too.
I think you said that you generate passwords randomly but throwing w dices is nor very random. If you throw 2 dices the most common number will be 7 because there's a lot more ways to make a 7 than for example to make a 3. Throwing 2 dices isn't so random.
Sharkey Games She doesn’t send them to your email. She mails them. Also, she doesn’t have your username. Nor does she know what you’re using the password for.
This is the stupidest thing i've ever heard, i mean there's dozens of perfectly functioning password generating websites that don't cost you anything and they actually generate the passwords randomly and not by a roll of dice
are you saying the girl is stupid or the people buying the passwords. Because I think she's smart taking advantage of the idiots on the internet who are buying passwords.
The websites that do it have flaws that the girl doesn't 1. The website uses a pseudo-random generator, a dice is more random 2. The website sends it over the internet which could be intercepted 3. The website is more likely to use it against you 4. The website could get hacked and if they keep a database of passwords, yours would be leaked
1. Does it matter? Random is random. 2 & 3 & 4. THE GIRL COULD LEAK YOUR PASSWORD. Someone could kidnap or torture her if they really wanted your password. But none of this even matters. Why the hell would you need a website or some random girl to make a password for you?
There is no such thing as random in computer programming even though it may seem random it's just a list of codes and programs running in a loop i am a programmer, and i know this, random numbers from computer may seem random to us humans, but they are just creative coding. nothing more
Bill Gates : Yo I need a password for ma PayPal, can u fix it miss? Her : Yea Sure, hehehe. Minutes Later After he got his password. Bill Gates : Yo Wheres Ma Balance at!?
Probably you have gotten this response millions of times. But not all children are childish, Some have actual companies and it's great that kids can have such maturity for their age. This world is really taking a number the education priorities and it's great if kids can learn how to do things on their own.
@Abdussalam H I doubt she understands it. She's probably just aware of it. Also I didn't know you had to do that as a mechanical engineering student. Do you study thermodynamics as part of that course?
If u are really dependent on a person for making ur password, it's just damn shameful....and the person offering u a password can hack ur application!!!!BE ATTENTIVE..
I agree about the part with it being shameful but I wanted to say that she's probably not trying to steal passwords since on the website she said "Q: How do you know I'm not stealing your passwords? A: Once you get your passwords you need to make some changes such as capitalizing some letters and/or adding symbols such as exclamations. This way it's not the exact same one that I gave you." - www.dicewarepasswords.com/about But who knows.
You don't think for yourself, either. You make shitty meme comments on RU-vid, and absolutely everything you think was influenced by someone else, whether you like it or not.
@@xinamoira274 In the world of memes, I gotta speak with memes. It's like language, I can't talk to a Chinese person who can only speak Chinese by speaking in English. I have to speak in their language so that they can understand.
@@xinamoira274 For your information, the synonym of meme is literally imitation, with the definition: the elements passed from one individual to another The culture of meme-ing, let's us use another's (another person's) element/context for our own use. So is there anything wrong with meme-ing? Have you not ever used someone else's joke to entertain another? Many people have also commented that way about memers not being able to think for ourselves. Doesn't that mean I can claim that your comment is not original? Sincerely, a communist.