Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Knajpa na lunch ale tylko ze spokojną cichą muzyką

Nie do wiary, że aż tak łatwo nami sterować :) Okazuje się, że szybka i głośna muzyka w restauracjach sprawia, że ludzie więcej piją i szybciej jedzą. Dzięki czemu restauratorzy mogą w ten sposób szybciej pozbywać się klientów w godzinach lunczu/największego obłożenia stolików.

via: How Restaurants Get You Drunk

Skąd się wzięło comiesięczne zmienianie hasła ?

Wiecie skąd się wzięło comiesięczne zmienianie hasła ?
So where did the "change passwords once a month" dictum come from? Back in the days when people were using mainframes without networking, the biggest uncontrolled authentication concern was cracking. Resources, however, were limited. As best as I can find, some DoD contractors did some back-of-the-envelope calculation about how long it would take to run through all the possible passwords using their mainframe, and the result was several months. So, they (somewhat reasonably) set a password change period of 1 month as a means to defeat systematic cracking attempts. This was then enshrined in policy, which got published, and largely accepted by others over the years. As time went on, auditors began to look for this and ended up building it into their “best practice” that they expected. It also got written into several lists of security recommendations.

This is DESPITE the fact that any reasonable analysis shows that a monthly password change has little or no end impact on improving security! It is a “best practice” based on experience 30 years ago with non-networked mainframes in a DoD environment—hardly a match for today’s systems, especially in academia!


via: Security Myths and Passwords