Also available on crt.sh: https://crt.sh/?id=6316640888 (from comment #7)
On Android you can use Keepass2Android[0] to open your KeePass files. You still have to copy your kdbx file to your phone somehow, of course. [0] https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=keepass2androi...
> What are "[email protected]$$ snapshots" Looks like it was fixed, as it now reads "bad@$$ snapshots" for me. From reading another related article[0] I guess they didn't want to write "badass": > (...) and completing…
Archived link, since it appears to be down at the moment: https://web.archive.org/web/20211031124351/https://www.slony...
> Why isn’t SHA256 good as a password hash? Because it wasn't designed for it. For password hashing you want a hash that has a salt (so that the same password on two accounts doesn't have the same hash on the database)…
Also available on crt.sh: https://crt.sh/?id=6316640888 (from comment #7)
On Android you can use Keepass2Android[0] to open your KeePass files. You still have to copy your kdbx file to your phone somehow, of course. [0] https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=keepass2androi...
> What are "[email protected]$$ snapshots" Looks like it was fixed, as it now reads "bad@$$ snapshots" for me. From reading another related article[0] I guess they didn't want to write "badass": > (...) and completing…
Archived link, since it appears to be down at the moment: https://web.archive.org/web/20211031124351/https://www.slony...
> Why isn’t SHA256 good as a password hash? Because it wasn't designed for it. For password hashing you want a hash that has a salt (so that the same password on two accounts doesn't have the same hash on the database)…