(via Secret Microsoft policy limited Hotmail passwords to 16 characters | Ars Technica)

For years, Microsoft engineers have quietly limited Hotmail passwords to 16 characters, a revelation that has surprised and concerned some users who have long entered passcodes twice that long to access accounts.
One such user is Costin Raiu, the director of the global research and analysis team at antivirus provider Kaspersky Lab. On Friday he reported receiving a new error message when he entered the same 30-character passcode he long used on the Microsoft site. When he typed in the first 16 characters, as the error message directed him to do, he was able to access his account just fine. The change concerned Raiu, because it meant that for years his Hotmail account hadn’t been as secure as he was led to believe.
“To pull off this trick with older passwords, Microsoft has two choices,” he wrote. Choice one: “Store full plaintext passwords in their [database]; compare the first 16 [characters] only.” Choice two: “Calculate the hash only on the first 16; ignore the rest…”

(via Secret Microsoft policy limited Hotmail passwords to 16 characters | Ars Technica)

For years, Microsoft engineers have quietly limited Hotmail passwords to 16 characters, a revelation that has surprised and concerned some users who have long entered passcodes twice that long to access accounts.

One such user is Costin Raiu, the director of the global research and analysis team at antivirus provider Kaspersky Lab. On Friday he reported receiving a new error message when he entered the same 30-character passcode he long used on the Microsoft site. When he typed in the first 16 characters, as the error message directed him to do, he was able to access his account just fine. The change concerned Raiu, because it meant that for years his Hotmail account hadn’t been as secure as he was led to believe.

“To pull off this trick with older passwords, Microsoft has two choices,” he wrote. Choice one: “Store full plaintext passwords in their [database]; compare the first 16 [characters] only.” Choice two: “Calculate the hash only on the first 16; ignore the rest…”

Maybe we all have in us a secret pond where evil and ugly things germinate and grow strong. But this culture is fenced, and the swimming brood climbs up only to fall back. Might it not be that in the dark pools of some men the evil grows strong enough to wriggle over the fence and swim free? Would not such a man be our monster, and are we not related to him in our hidden water? It would be absurd if we did not understand both angels and devils, since we invented them. — John Steinbeck, East of Eden (via liquidnight)
(via it’s deadlicious™: Secret)
Issue 17. August 71.

(via it’s deadlicious™: Secret)

Issue 17. August 71.