From: gmiller@dey-systems.com (Greg Miller)
To: “Sentiono Leowinata” <sentiono@cycor.ca>
Message Hash: 4f78f02fa2d6c843d838b825788e41c4e843c33480e8c3d443201915c0c32375
Message ID: <31e7c648.8537112@pop.mis.net>
Reply To: <199607130216.XAA15487@bud.peinet.pe.ca>
UTC Datetime: 1996-07-13 20:20:08 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 14 Jul 1996 04:20:08 +0800
From: gmiller@dey-systems.com (Greg Miller)
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 1996 04:20:08 +0800
To: "Sentiono Leowinata" <sentiono@cycor.ca>
Subject: Re: Good dictionary files?
In-Reply-To: <199607130216.XAA15487@bud.peinet.pe.ca>
Message-ID: <31e7c648.8537112@pop.mis.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
On Fri, 12 Jul 96 23:21:51 -0400, you wrote:
>As many people say, a good password cracker is very dependent on the
>dictionary file(s). When one has a very good dictionary file(s), the
>chances of password being cracked is bigger. I am wondering if
>someone can tell me where I can get good dictionary file(s). Search
>on the web result to nothing. I have one large dictionary file (about
>14Mb) to check it, but I still not feel comfortable to say it's a
>good one.
Apparenlty you missed the ranting and raving only a few days ago (over
100 messages on the subject).
There are several wordlists available at
ftp://sable.ox.ac.uk/pub/wordlists
begin 644 tagline.txt
enum MicrosoftBoolean {TRUE, FALSE, MAYBE};
Greg Miller: Programmer/Analyst (gmiller@dey-systems.com)
http://grendel.ius.indiana.edu/~gmiller/
end.
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