@ TheDogout. Fanboism FTW! Umm that was a pretty stupid response. I suggest you investigate password cracking a little. 80million facts lmao. iIhad no idea the formula for cancer was E=Mc^2. If that made any sense at all you'd be a hero to millions. A little about password cracking for that cloud guy below. They mean 6 characters, and assuming it is case sensitive and there are no special characters it amounts to something like ((26x2)+(10))^6. 26x2 for the entire alphabet in both cases and 10 for digits 0 through 9. 62^6=56,800,235,584. They obviously make assumptions like that when making the calculations. Finally, if you ever tried breaking the pwd on an RAR file then you would probably have tried a dictionary attack. dictionary attacks really potentially reduce search times because the average person is unlikely to use a password made of random characters longer than 6 or so characters. The numbers in the article are just for reference using certain assumptions.
PS3s used to capture child pornographers
US' Cyber Crimes Center begins using console's processing power to crack passwords on suspected sexual predators' protected files.
The PlayStation 3 has been used for a variety of altruistic tasks following its launch in 2006. Perhaps the most high-profile of these ventures is the Folding@home project, which uses spare processing power from idling, networked PS3s to undertake the arduous task of simulating protein folding in order to study the causes of various diseases.
The latest effort to harness the PS3's processing power for good comes from the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement Cyber Crimes Center. As reported by Axcess News, the Cyber Crimes Center (C3) is using networked PS3s to capture sexual predators by cracking passwords on computers suspected of containing child pornography.
The report notes that while law enforcement agents can execute a warrant to secure the physical computers, the Fourth Amendment protects suspected predators from surrendering passwords and other encryption material. As such, the agency attempts to crack the passwords by using a program that tries all possible key combinations. The report notes that a six-digit password has nearly 282 trillion possible permutations, and the networked PS3 can attempt 4 million guesses per second.
"Bad guys are encrypting their stuff now, so we need a methodology of hacking on that to try to break passwords," said C3 senior special agent Claude E. Davenport. "The PlayStation 3--its processing component--is perfect for large-scale library attacks."
Davenport went on to note that while other gaming consoles could technically also accomplish the task, the agency also needs to install software using the open-source operating system Linux. However, C3 must use pre-PS3 Slim units, as new restrictions introduced with the latest iteration of the console prevent the agency from installing the open-source operating system.
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