Linked by Howard Fosdick on Sat 10th Nov 2012 07:28 UTC
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Member since:
2006-12-05
Even if they do you'll probably have changed all the passwords by the time they actually manage to brute-force it.
Who's to say it's the cloud provider that will try to do the snooping? I actually didn't mean that with what I originally said. These companies run public servers, and they're not exactly unknown servers... they're well-known, and up for potential attack from anyone, anywhere on the Internet. They're big, easy targets. It's security breaches I would be worried about when putting a file containing *all* of my passwords on a server somewhere on the Internet.
Someone just has to breach the server's security and then take what they can. They can then post all the files they can manage to get on a server somewhere where they and their cracker buddies download away and have a field day playing games seeing who can crack the most password files the fastest. And if there's ever a vulnerability found that allows crackers to easily break the encryption code and read the contents of the file... well, now every single one of your passwords can be found by just accessing one file that's been made publicly available on the Internet to anyone.
Edited 2012-11-11 10:17 UTC