Last week, I tried to register for a service and was really surprised by a password limit of 16 characters. Why on earth yould you impose such strict limits? Never heard of correct horse battery staple?

  • unmagical@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    If a company tells you your password has a maximumn length, they are untrustable with anything important.

    I would add if they require a short “maximum length.” There’s no reason to allow someone to use the entirety of Moby Dick as their password, so a reasonable limit can be set. That’s not 16 characters, but you probably don’t need to accept more than 1024 anyway.

      • frezik@midwest.social
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        1 month ago

        Bcrypt and scrypt functionally truncate it to 72 chars.

        There’s bandwidth and ram reasons to put some kind of upper limit. 1024 is already kinda silly.

      • phcorcoran@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Sure but if my password is the entire lord of the rings trilogy as a string, hashing that would consume some resources

      • unmagical@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        Of course, but if you’re paying for network and processing costs you might as well cap it at something secure and reasonable. No sense in leaving that unbounded when there’s no benefit over a lengthy cap and there are potentially drawbacks from someone seeing if they can use the entirety of Wikipedia as their password.

        • DaPorkchop_@lemmy.ml
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          1 month ago

          You can also hash it on the client-side, then the server-side network and processing costs are fixed because every password will be transmitted using same number of bytes

          • unmagical@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            You still need to deal with that on the server. The client you build and provide could just truncate the input, but end users can pick their clients so the problem still remains.