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Showing results for tags 'passwords'.
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Dear PW Community Let me shout out my question here, I really don't know where to start and hope someone can give me a hint or tell me to resign and go home and cry. I want to create a subpage that is only accessible to people with unique access codes. It's gonna be an online concert streaming page (thanks Corona!). People who buy tickets through a local ticketing service should be able to access and stream the show with their individual access code. These codes should work only for this person and show. If someone in the «audience» closes and reopens the page, they should get in again, but not their friends who were given the code of course, basically just like in a club with a ticket and a stamp on the wrist. Now, is there a possibility to achieve that with more or less basic Processwire skills? In my imagination I have a field where I list the given access codes, another two to add start and ending date/time of the show, maybe one for a unique ID/title of the show. Is there an existing module for something like that? Should I get into the module development field and create that? How?? Haha. Any comments are welcome here. Thanks, Nuél
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Hi, I posted a question on Stack and as yet not got an anwser that is something novel. I'm interested to know if this worries anyone else and whether we can do something about it. So here goes: If a user logins to your online sevice, let's say a job posting site, they give you an email and password to access your service later... Lets say a malicous person with access to the server could write into the template to store the passwords as plain text somewhere. Given that people generally don't use a new password for each website, now that malicious person has the potential to access other online services using these details (where there isn't any secondly security like 2-factor). Is there anything we can do to battle this? In an ideal world, maybe setting up a zero-knowledge algorithm to log people in and out... https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/155806/what-to-do-about-compremised-passwords-through-malicious-sites-or-site-hacks/155823#155823 food for thought
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Are there any behind-the-scenes reasons that whitespace is not allowed in passwords, or is it a policy choice? I've found that people can remember phrases that mean something to them well so they make longer, more secure passwords/passphrases.