Neat idea, but defaulting to recursive force mode (-rf) is frankly a bit scary (and irresponsible). A great way to accidentally shoot your own foot off after you've put it through a meat grinder. I pity the fool that…
Sounds like sour grapes, not discrimination... I moved coast to coast to work for a SV technology company (fully paid), did NOT graduate from a fancy college (or any for that matter), have my nights and weekends free,…
Having been a hiring manager for a few years... I can say that degrees have only really mattered to me when the applicant hasn't any real experience to speak of in the industry. Experience is king, plain and simple.…
I wondered the same, but I'm not sure that doubling my password would annoy me into changing it, especially when the password was previously capped at 8 characters.
makes sense... hopefully this is their reason instead of the former.
A better way to do this would have been: * hash current passwords with a salt, unique to each password entry, and throw away the plaintext entries. * keep a history of hashes per user, to prevent changing to a past…
I't because they are still storing passwords in cleartext... If they were hashing passwords (which is the correct way to do it) there would be no limit.
https://crocodoc.com/customers/ Crocodoc is likely generating web previews of your documents.
Neat idea, but defaulting to recursive force mode (-rf) is frankly a bit scary (and irresponsible). A great way to accidentally shoot your own foot off after you've put it through a meat grinder. I pity the fool that…
Sounds like sour grapes, not discrimination... I moved coast to coast to work for a SV technology company (fully paid), did NOT graduate from a fancy college (or any for that matter), have my nights and weekends free,…
Having been a hiring manager for a few years... I can say that degrees have only really mattered to me when the applicant hasn't any real experience to speak of in the industry. Experience is king, plain and simple.…
I wondered the same, but I'm not sure that doubling my password would annoy me into changing it, especially when the password was previously capped at 8 characters.
makes sense... hopefully this is their reason instead of the former.
A better way to do this would have been: * hash current passwords with a salt, unique to each password entry, and throw away the plaintext entries. * keep a history of hashes per user, to prevent changing to a past…
I't because they are still storing passwords in cleartext... If they were hashing passwords (which is the correct way to do it) there would be no limit.
https://crocodoc.com/customers/ Crocodoc is likely generating web previews of your documents.