Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Most people need a name and password to get on line in the first place.
He told me my new password and then asked if I was all set.
And a single password was sometimes used by a group of people.
He has given the password to 15 or so friends.
But then you really would want to change your password.
At best, security is never any better than a password.
Remember all of you the password which was given out.
There was no security on the system, not even a password.
Now, every possible password gets to be many pretty quickly.
"Where did you get the password in the first place?"
Get the girl who looks after your computer to change the password.
Each time a hand is moved, the password given changes.
If it is, they can then read out the password.
I know your password, and so do all the girls in my class.
By the way, did some of you think to ask the password before we left this morning?
Passwords are at the heart of security on a big computer.
Do you have the passwords to your late father's computer system?
So in effect there's one password to get all that data.
I mean, who wants to type your password every single time?
But there of course was a password that he needed.
And the password is sort of the original security technology.
But they only work if you're starting off with a bad password.
So trying passwords is the only thing they can do.
The bad news is for people who use common passwords.
Class 1: Something known; perhaps a password or another fact.