Fedora 19 To Stop Masking Passwords
First time accepted submitter PAjamian writes "Maintainers of the Anaconda installer in Fedora have taken it upon themselves to show passwords in plaintext on the screen as they are entered into the installer. Following on the now recanted statements of security expert Bruce Schneier, Anaconda maintainers have decided that it is not a security risk to show passwords on your screen in the latest Alpha release of Fedora 19. Members of the Fedora community on the Fedora devel mailing list are showing great concern over this change in established security protocols." Note: the change was first reported in the linked thread by Dan Mashal.
... thinking they know what is best for everybody. Same stupid story again and again. A button or hot-key for those that want to see their passwords would be acceptable, but making it the default is not.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
It's only in cleartext during installation, and only while the password field has focus. This is hardly something to get up in arms about, unless you regularly re-install your OS in front of a crowd.
#include <sig.h>
I like the way Windows 8 addressed this problem. They added a button that looks like an eye on the right hand side of the password field to show the password as you've typed it. That seems like a better compromise than briefly showing the password characters.
I hope it catches on. Just give me a tickbox if I want masking when in a public place.
"Be nice, veer left, and never stop thinking" Iain Banks - Walking On Glass
I solve this problem by making all my passwords ********.
my password is '*********' so there will be no change for me
The log-in and sign-up pages on Phil's Hobby Shop have a "Show password as I type" checkbox. Is this what you were looking for?
As a MacOS X developer, the developer can mark text entry fields as "password". A major effect of this that other applications (like external spelling checkers, for example) don't have access to what you are typing. The other effect is that the input is hidden.
At the moment, you can't have a password field that gives protection against malware that could be on your computer, _and_ at the same time displays the password. Only one or the other.
I don't know if you are sarcastic or not, but I for one am thankful for the maintainers of Fedora. Hear me out...
These days I have to type in passwords that are akin to random letters. I am ok with that. BUT it is BLOODY EFFEN HARD to type in the password into the text field. And if the text field hides the text it becomes annoying to have to input the data again. The problem is that I know my keyboard, but sometimes I have to type twice to hit the correct %^*( character. If I am looking at the keyboard and the screen at the same time things become confusing. Doing this two or three times becomes a royal pain in the arse!
I understand WHY you should not do this, but quite frankly there is theory and there is practice. And in an era of long obtuse passwords I am thankful!
"You can't make a race horse of a pig"
"No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
This is a good case for, as suggested by many in the discussion, a "show password" button, as is widely used. I don't see an argument for making it the default.