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mathspp.com
| | evanhahn.com
6.0 parsecs away

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| | I got nerd-sniped and had to try to solve this.
| | myers.io
4.8 parsecs away

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| | Every so often I see posts on Stack Exchange, or Hacker News where someone has figured out that their passwords are being sent to the server and the server can see them! The logic that we see is that if the password is hashed client side, then only the hash needs to be sent to the server, so the server never knows the password. Unfortunately, I sometimes even see this go one step further when people suggest that with this arrangement, HTTPS isnt required. Wrong.
| | markodenic.com
3.6 parsecs away

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| | Free programming books, algorithms, public APIs, and much more.
| | juliaferraioli.com
21.6 parsecs away

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| 2-Factor Authentication (2FA) or Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) are ways of securing accounts above and beyond normal password protection. Typically, we think of 2FA as something you know (your password) and something you have (a device). The idea is that if you compromise one, you still cant get access to the protected resource. A room protected by a keypad and ID card reader is a great example of 2FA. You might be able to guess the code, but youd also need a valid ID card to get access to the locked...