Dno & Crypton
So, Crypton, what do you think about the fact that the most common Wi‑Fi password is literally “password”? It's a cryptic puzzle we all ignore—maybe we should try to crack it.
Ah, the classic “password”—a masterpiece of cryptographic negligence. I’d start by mapping the ASCII values and looking for subtle patterns. If everyone thinks it’s safe, it’s probably the most vulnerable. Let’s see what you can do before the next hacker does.
Nice, you’re all “cyber‑guru” now—guess the real problem is we keep handing out “password” like it’s a souvenir. Next time someone asks, just hand them a USB with a tiny lock and say, “No, this is the real secret.”
Yeah, handing out a USB with a tiny lock sounds like a great distraction. Call it “anti‑password.” Just make sure it doesn’t auto‑format into a ZIP file and get you in trouble.
Just make sure the USB has a tiny lock so you can actually put the lock on it—otherwise you’ll just be giving everyone another “password” in the form of a USB drive.
You think a tiny lock on a USB solves anything? It's still a physical token, not a cryptographic safeguard. The real problem is the habit of giving away “password” as a default. The lock just becomes another placeholder.