10-13-2013, 07:22 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-13-2013, 07:35 PM by Kgx Pnqvhm.)
At the Passwords 12 conference, S. Rraveau explained his mining the Wikimedia sites to create his famous wikipedia-wordlist-sraveau.
And at Passwords 13, IT3700 & joshdustin presented Password Cracking, From "abc123" to "thereisnofatebutwhatwemake".
The academics have:
The Corpus of Global Web-Based English (GloWbE) is composed of 1.9 billion words from 1.8 million web pages in 20 different English-speaking countries. The corpus was created by Mark Davies of Brigham Young University, and it was released in April 2013.
It seems that IMDb would be a good source to mine, but they seem to frown on that:
You may not use data mining, robots, screen scraping, or similar online data gathering and extraction tools on our website.
But is anybody doing any password/passphrase oriented mining, anyway?
Update: I just noticed the article How the Bible and YouTube are fueling the next frontier of password cracking at
http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/10/...-cracking/
And at Passwords 13, IT3700 & joshdustin presented Password Cracking, From "abc123" to "thereisnofatebutwhatwemake".
The academics have:
The Corpus of Global Web-Based English (GloWbE) is composed of 1.9 billion words from 1.8 million web pages in 20 different English-speaking countries. The corpus was created by Mark Davies of Brigham Young University, and it was released in April 2013.
It seems that IMDb would be a good source to mine, but they seem to frown on that:
You may not use data mining, robots, screen scraping, or similar online data gathering and extraction tools on our website.
But is anybody doing any password/passphrase oriented mining, anyway?
Update: I just noticed the article How the Bible and YouTube are fueling the next frontier of password cracking at
http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/10/...-cracking/