To further add to that, how would one know in the beginning that there was
a password with a dirty word in it?
Ron Power
Programmer
Information Services
City Of St. John's, NL
P.O. Box 908
St. John's, NL
A1C 5M2
709-576-8132
rpower@xxxxxxxxxx
http://www.stjohns.ca/
___________________________________________________________________________
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"Lim Hock-Chai" <Lim.Hock-Chai@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent by: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
2008/01/25 11:26 AM
Please respond to
RPG programming on the AS400 / iSeries <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To
"RPG programming on the AS400 / iSeries" <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
cc
Subject
RE: Dirty Word Filter
I don't see the point of filtering Dirty word in password. Shouldn't it
be a private thing. Nobody else should be able to see it and nobody
else should know it but the owner.
-----Original Message-----
From: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of SJL
Sent: Friday, January 25, 2008 8:50 AM
To: rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Dirty Word Filter
Then to make it relevant to RPG:
In 1990 I had to write a Password validity checker program (in RPG) to
attach to the CHGPWD command which, among other things, would keep a
user from using a dirty word as their password (or embedded within their
password).
The really funny thing is that I had a database file with all of the
dirty words (that we could think of) in clear text for the RPG program
to check against.
<lol>
sjl
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