On 13Jan2007 14:15, Craig White <craigwhite@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: | On Sat, 2007-01-13 at 12:21 -0600, Chris Mohler wrote: | > Not an answer but - one time I tried mounting my home dir via | > netatalk, and (much to my surprise) the password entry box on the mac | > (OS7 - don't ask!) would only let me input 8 chars for the password! | > Not good, since my passwd is much longer - I had to change it | > temporarily. | ---- | agreed and this is a Macintosh issue since I have set up LDAP | authentication at various clients and have had to shorten passwords for | Macintosh users Original UNIX crypt only hashed the first 8 characters of a password. Making passwords longer gave no added protection, but could supply the illusion that the password was more secure. If the Mac doesn't or didn't speak the newer hashes then there's a good argument for constraining the password length - it ensures people know to get all the hard-to-crackness into those 8 characters. (Conversely, Windows passwords are 14 characters, but hashed as two 7-character chunks, individually attackable, so they are even weaker!) Cheers, -- Cameron Simpson <cs@xxxxxxxxxx> DoD#743 http://www.cskk.ezoshosting.com/cs/ For the people that aim to stop P2P, they have turned a centralized system like Napster - easily controlled, easily monitored - into a fully decentralized system in the form of Kazaa, as well as a fragmented ecosystem of thousands of centralized servers through BitTorrent. This was probably a bad decision. As the folks on Fark.com say, "chilarity ensues." - Monkey Methods BitTorrent Paper http://monkeymethods.org/pubs/is-bittorrent-dead-centralization-analysis.htm