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| ▲ | observationist 5 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | 6 characters or fewer passwords, if there were passwords at all. Phreaking still worked into the 90s, and all sorts of really stupid things were done without really thinking about the security at all. They'd print out receipts with the entire credit or debit card number and information on it, or carbon copy the card with an impression, and you'd see these receipts blowing around parking lots, or find entire bags or dumpsters full of them. Knowing an IP address might be sufficient information to gain access to systems that should have been secured. It's pretty amazing that things functioned as well as they did, that society was as trusting and trustworthy as it was, that we were able to build as much as we did with as relatively a tiny level of exploitation that happened. If the same level of vulnerability was as prevalent today as it was back then, civilization might collapse overnight. | | |
| ▲ | mjevans 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | To be fair, back then it was relatively easy for anyone intelligent enough to be able to abuse any of that to have a well paying 'white collar' job with things like full health benefits, a pension, and more than sufficient income to support an entirely family SOLO. They even owned houses! When your life is set like that why risk trying to defraud someone a the cost of a nice suit when that's something that can be done legally and written off as a business expense on taxes? |
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| ▲ | axiolite 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | In 1996? OpenBSD and Apache had been around for a year. PGP had been around for several years. HTTPS was used where needed. SecurID tokens were common for organizations that cared about security. Admittedly SSH wasn't around, but kerberos+rlogin and SSL+telnet was available. Organizations who cared about security would have SecurID tokens issued to their employees and required for login. Dial-in over phone lines, and requiring a password, was much less discoverable or exploitable than services exposed to the internet, today. | |
| ▲ | 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | [deleted] |
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