-
Updated
Dec 4, 2019
password-safety
Here are 163 public repositories matching this topic...
-
Updated
Oct 21, 2020 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Nov 8, 2020 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Nov 2, 2020 - C++
-
Updated
Feb 17, 2020 - Python
-
Updated
Apr 26, 2019 - Python
-
Updated
Nov 20, 2020 - TypeScript
-
Updated
Oct 26, 2019 - Python
-
Updated
Jan 28, 2018 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Jan 17, 2019 - Shell
-
Updated
Nov 1, 2020 - Ruby
-
Updated
Nov 16, 2020 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Oct 2, 2020 - Go
-
Updated
Jun 22, 2016 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Mar 4, 2018 - Python
-
Updated
Mar 19, 2018 - C#
-
Updated
Nov 2, 2020 - PHP
-
Updated
Mar 12, 2020 - Go
-
Updated
Mar 4, 2019 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Feb 14, 2019 - Go
-
Updated
Nov 21, 2018 - C++
-
Updated
Nov 19, 2020 - Go
-
Updated
Sep 17, 2020 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Aug 18, 2020 - Go
-
Updated
Apr 29, 2018 - PowerShell
-
Updated
Sep 29, 2019 - Python
-
Updated
Feb 22, 2018 - HTML
-
Updated
Jan 25, 2020 - Go
Improve this page
Add a description, image, and links to the password-safety topic page so that developers can more easily learn about it.
Add this topic to your repo
To associate your repository with the password-safety topic, visit your repo's landing page and select "manage topics."
You should order masks by efficiency (
occurrences/key_space) because this will lead to the less guesses to crack passwords.Looking at the top 5:
https://github.com/kaonashi-passwords/Kaonashi/blob/5239bd333ed34993b43126a4499606ba70086034/masks/kaonashi_masks_numbered.txt#L1-L5
And ordering just the 1000 in kaonashi_masks_numbered.txt by efficiency the top 5 are now: