I read the post but somehow missed that. Sincere apologies.
Would it be a bad security practice to keep a database of the SHA hashes of maybe the 10 000 most common passwords then alert users who try to use them? Obviously you would do the comparison before applying your actual…
This was an unexpected benefit of the Pomodoro technique for me. I ended up walking around during the forced breaks and it definitely reduced the physical stresses imposed by coding days.
I'm intrigued by these sorts of studies - not coming from a statistical background I'm amazed by how few samples they need to draw conclusions. If you told me you only had 341 events in your A/B test I'd be suspicious…
I read the post but somehow missed that. Sincere apologies.
Would it be a bad security practice to keep a database of the SHA hashes of maybe the 10 000 most common passwords then alert users who try to use them? Obviously you would do the comparison before applying your actual…
This was an unexpected benefit of the Pomodoro technique for me. I ended up walking around during the forced breaks and it definitely reduced the physical stresses imposed by coding days.
I'm intrigued by these sorts of studies - not coming from a statistical background I'm amazed by how few samples they need to draw conclusions. If you told me you only had 341 events in your A/B test I'd be suspicious…