I just ran across this vid (12/21/24), and I have a question if Greg and/or Enrique still read these comments. My question: Since Google’s password figurer outer thingy can decipher a password almost instantly, why couldn’t computer manufacturers hardwire their machines so there’s a time delay between password attempts? As you’ll see from my somewhat garbled question, cybersecurity isn’t my speciality. But I’ll try to explain my question as clearly as a noob like myself can, so here goes: If a hacker was forced to wait, say, 200 milliseconds before trying the next possible password, and given that there are, say, 352 million-billion-gazillion different combinations possible for an 18 character password that’s made up of numbers, upper and lower case letters, and symbols... wouldn’t that imperceptible (to a human who normally inputs the correct password) delay add up to being way too much time needed to crack the password? I’m probably missing something here. If so, I’d be thankful if you could tell me what it is. Also, I read somewhere that each additional password character exponentially increases its complexity, and that a company somewhere has invented a true random password generator capable of creating a thousand character password in one second or less. Could even Google's newfangled super dooper computer chip crack a 1,000 character password in a reasonable amount of time? More to the point: could this new chip’s great, great, great grandkids (due in about 18 months) crack a 1,000 character password? Last question: Anything a human mind can invent, other humans can figure ways around it… but vice versa, too! In other words, Google invented a quantum chip that can crack any password. So, is there a way to secure information, other than using an Abloy padlock? Or going back to using the typewriters and carbon paper that I matriculated on after the Civil War? I try to keep up, but knowledge is expanding exponentially, while my learning ability chugs along linearly, so… _help!!_ Please? Thx, bye bye.
You’ve made an excellent point here, thanks for sharing! Somewhat aside, I wanted to ask: my OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (blood frost vague mom crop midnight innocent avoid human spin grace hurdle). How should I go about transferring them to ByBit?
I just ran across this vid (12/21/24), and I have a question if Greg and/or Enrique still read these comments. My question:
Since Google’s password figurer outer thingy can decipher a password almost instantly, why couldn’t computer manufacturers hardwire their machines so there’s a time delay between password attempts?
As you’ll see from my somewhat garbled question, cybersecurity isn’t my speciality. But I’ll try to explain my question as clearly as a noob like myself can, so here goes:
If a hacker was forced to wait, say, 200 milliseconds before trying the next possible password, and given that there are, say, 352 million-billion-gazillion different combinations possible for an 18 character password that’s made up of numbers, upper and lower case letters, and symbols... wouldn’t that imperceptible (to a human who normally inputs the correct password) delay add up to being way too much time needed to crack the password?
I’m probably missing something here. If so, I’d be thankful if you could tell me what it is.
Also, I read somewhere that each additional password character exponentially increases its complexity, and that a company somewhere has invented a true random password generator capable of creating a thousand character password in one second or less.
Could even Google's newfangled super dooper computer chip crack a 1,000 character password in a reasonable amount of time? More to the point: could this new chip’s great, great, great grandkids (due in about 18 months) crack a 1,000 character password?
Last question: Anything a human mind can invent, other humans can figure ways around it… but vice versa, too! In other words, Google invented a quantum chip that can crack any password.
So, is there a way to secure information, other than using an Abloy padlock? Or going back to using the typewriters and carbon paper that I matriculated on after the Civil War?
I try to keep up, but knowledge is expanding exponentially, while my learning ability chugs along linearly, so… _help!!_
Please? Thx, bye bye.
These video was only 10 minutes did we lose 50 minutes?
Are you still doing top trades on Tuesday’s?
You’ve made an excellent point here, thanks for sharing! Somewhat aside, I wanted to ask: my OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (blood frost vague mom crop midnight innocent avoid human spin grace hurdle). How should I go about transferring them to ByBit?
Please post your wallet's address, and I’ll see what I can do…