That's fucked up, they should not do that. Even if they do it in a way that users are actually secure (maybe generating the password in the browser, nothing serverside?), it isn't good to train people to trust a website for this.
hunter2
All I see is *******.
correct horse battery staple
Your password manager does this too!
Or just use your password manager. Where you save that password.
gasp what??
I would definitely use those passwords! /s
Right! How good is the entropy?...
$ Openssl rand 16 | base64
today I learned. Thanks :)
That isn't great from a security perspective
$ pwgen -s -1 32
pass --generate -c
You can also just use "random password x" with x being a number. What I use more often is "random uuid" which I hope is self explanatory.
Fun fact: You can generate a random UUID in your web browser without needing to visit a website. Just open your browser console and type crypto.randomUUID()
Stop putting crypto into everything!
(/jk)
This seems like one picked up data packet away from being a bad idea. Am I overthinking this?
With https as protocol, picked up data packets won't do much harm.
But relying on anything but a local password manager is imho still a bad idea.
Yeah I think I'll just click an icon in my password manager instead.
This is probably ok. First of all, they're probably actually doing it in Javascript in the browser. It probably never travels over the network at all. And, if it did, with HTTPS it would be hard to intercept and decrypt except by a government or something.
But, it still gives me the willies to generate a password on a web page. Fundamentally a web browser is still a tool for sending and receiving data over the Internet, and that's not the kind of tool I'd want to be generating something that I don't want other people to know or see.
What happens if there's a bug? If the password is being generated in an app on my local system a badly designed app with a bug could maybe log my newly generated password in a local log file somewhere. If there's a bug in DuckDuckGo's javascript, who knows where that newly generated password might be logged?
This is probably fine. The connection to DDG will be over HTTPS, so a captured packet would need to be decoded first. And if someone were to manage to break the encryption, then they would also need to know what service you used the password for.
Ultimately, it's more secure to generate locally, but it would be a huge amount of work to get anything usable out of a packet capture
If you're going to auto generate passwords, just use BitWarden.
I use KeePass. It's just a local file (which you can sync/host how you see fit if you need to). I don't understand why people choose to use password managers hosted by other people. You almost certainly don't need that, and it introduces issues and vulnerabilities with little upside.
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