According to Hive Systems, hackers are finding it increasingly difficult to crack passwords, thanks to the widespread use of stronger hashing algorithms like bcrypt, which is replacing MD5 as the hashing technology of choice for most websites and online services. But as hardware gets more powerful, ...
Read Also
- Is generative AI bringing back private clouds?
- How to get a cinema look for your videos in Final Cut Pro
- Weather eases Canadian oil sands city wildfire menace
- For sale: unique piece of land in strategic Arctic archipelago
- NASA conducts ‘moonwalks’ in the Arizona desert for Artemis lunar mission
- Twitter is officially X.com now
- The 20 best PC games you can play right now for 2024
- A devastating fire 2,200 years ago preserved a moment of life and war in Iron Age Spain, down to a single gold earring
- Watch SpaceX stack Starship rocket ahead of fourth test flight
- We love this Hisense 65-inch mini-LED TV, and it’s $100 off
Latest TechSpot
- Dragon Age Inquisition is free for a week as part of Epic's Mega Sale
- AT&T wants to turn every smartphone into a satellite phone by no later than 2030
- Google's Trillium TPU achieves unprecedented performance increase for AI workloads
- TSMC's performance-boosting 3nm N3P node on schedule for late 2024
- Intel Thunderbolt Share aims to simplify connection and resource sharing between multiple PCs
- Dangerously thin iPad Pro proves surprisingly robust in bend tests
- Classic gaming emulators RetroArch and PPSSPP finally land on iOS
- Intel N250 "Twin Lake" CPU could replace Alder Lake-N for low-power laptops
- Android 15 new privacy push includes theft detection and secret app locker
- Microsoft asks staff in China to relocate amid escalating Washington-Beijing tech tensions