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I've used @ iin passwords as caproate without a problem
Glenn Ericson 718 898 9805gericson@xxxxxxxxxxxx
On Tuesday, May 30, 2023 at 05:14:44 PM EDT, Buck Calabro<kc2hiz@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 5/30/2023 4:05 PM, John Yeung wrote:
I don't think the expectation to be *able* to use '@' in a passwordAt the risk of excessive thread drift, I use a password manager, and I
necessarily has to do with wanting to recycle. I think it mainly has
to do with the idea that using "special characters" increases password
strength. And this idea is reinforced by many sources.
tell it to generate a random 32 character password for a new account.
That random string definitely has special characters including '@'. Yes,
it's adjustable both is terms of length and composition, but more of
each is better at slowing down brute force and rainbow attacks.
Personally, I don't see the solution to this behaviour as simple as
'choose another character in your password.' How would I maintain a
database of email addresses?
I guess the big picture answer is that I need to know the CCSID of the
target system/job/user and set up a specific ACS session with matching
CCSID.
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