Why do so many companies and people say that your password has to be so long and complicated, just to have restrictions?

I am in the process of changing some passwords (I have peen pwnd and it’s the password I use for use-less-er sites) and suddenly they say “password may contain a maximum of 15 characters“… I mean, 15 is long but it’s nothing for a password manager.

And then there’s the problem with special characters like äàáâæãåā ñ ī o ė ß ÿ ç just to name a few, or some even won’t let you type a [space] in them. Why is that? Is it bad programming? Or just a symptom of copy-pasta?

  • Spzi@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Bcrypt has a maximum of 72 bytes. It’ll truncate passwords longer than that. Remember that UTF8 encoding of special characters can easily take more than one byte.

    Interesting: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bcrypt#Maximum_password_length

    In the worst case a password is limited to 18 characters, when every character requires 4 bytes of UTF-8 encoding. For example:
    
    𐑜𐑝𐑟𐑥𐑷𐑻𐑽𐑾𐑿𐑿𐑰𐑩𐑛𐑙𐑘𐑙𐑒𐑔 (18 characters, 72 bytes)
    

    Makes me question if bcrypt deserves to be widely used. Is there really no superior alternative?

    • janAkali@lemmy.one
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Not only that, bcrypt could be run by GPUs and FPGA, that makes it more prone to bruteforcing attacks.

      There are 2 modern alternatives: scrypt and argon2. They both require a substantial amount of memory, so gpu and hardware computation is no longer feasible.