Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Password”
why use 128 bits to protect
why use 128 bits to protect
Could an Alien Civilization Crack Your Password? And Would They Even Care?
We’ve all heard the advice: Use strong passwords. Encrypt your data. 128-bit AES is secure. But what if an unfathomably advanced civilization—one that stores data at the atomic level—decided to crack your 16-byte password? Could they do it? And more importantly… would they even bother?
The Physics of Breaking AES-128
Let’s say “they” (some godlike alien superintelligence) can store 1 bit per atom. That’s the ultimate limit of classical information density—no wasted space, no inefficiency, just raw atomic-scale engineering.
Anti-GPU Password Cracking
Anti-GPU Password Cracking
Making Brute Force Attacks Impractical
In traditional CPU architecture, we typically see 4/8/12 cores inside a processor. However, even an entry-level GPU contains at least 3,000 cores. This presents a significant security concern when someone uses GPUs for brute force password cracking – they can achieve tremendous calculation speedups by deploying multiple GPUs simultaneously.
Consider this: an attacker with 1,000 GPUs (each having 3,000 cores) can potentially achieve a 3,000,000x speedup in brute force calculations. With this kind of computational power, passwords shorter than 14 characters become relatively easy targets.