https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/21/18634842/google-passwords-plain-text-g-suite-fourteen-years
Wasn’t it Linus that said he wouldn’t trust the idiots at Google with his source code? Lol
Oop, I’m canceling my google interview
I think Leetcode should start covering secure password storage
Leetcode needs questions on string encryption.
Rofl
When in doubt, encrypt. If still in doubt, encrypt twice. If you’re paranoid, build a Tor network hashing each byte of the password from 50 separate geographic sources on a Tor net. Then refactor the design when you discover it only works 85% of the time, which beats some banking and HR sites anyway.
Recently some folks moved from F to G. I'm not surprised.
Now we’re just missing A and N to make a FANG 🤪 Confess now, A and N! You know you’re in the club! This is what it takes to become prestigious!
Yawn
How do you even have a bug like this? Was it like logging passwords or something?
Not a bug, it's a feature
I thought they were at least actually key encrypted at rest? Not salted/hashed but I think it's misleading to say they were simply stored in plaintext, no? Unless this article has updated info.
Every article has used plaintext in the title and then in the article said they were stored encrypted and that they were only the one time use, change on first login password. I understand business insider making the wrong title, but tech crunch, come on.
Encrypted is just plain text with extra steps.
Welcome to the club!!! 😂
🍿🍿🍿
Hey. I'm here for the gang bang?