+1 - with the asininities being reported for Centos 8 and now Fedora it's
probably time to look for me on some other distribution.
If I want an all text no caps no punctuation no numbers password 102 characters
long let me do it. *I* am the one who suffers not you dweebs. Doing it my way I
have gone online since 1980 without any problems and on computers since 1962*
without being hacked. I must be doing something right. If I arrange the computer
so that it requires a minute between password trials how long would it take to
guess "grimreap" and hack my system? How long do you think that source of
hacking attempts would have enough access to get to a password prompt. THAT is
security not stupid password rule enforcement which leads to forgotten passwords.
{^_^} Joanne
* At University of Michigan as a freshman taking the Michigan Arden Decoder
class er 'scuse me - Michigan Algorithm Decoder.
On 20191102 08:05:28, Garry T. Williams wrote:
> On Saturday, November 2, 2019 5:56:53 AM EDT Tim via users wrote:
>> On Fri, 2019-11-01 at 12:38 -0400, Garry Williams wrote:
>>> The root user cannot set whatever password he wants on his machine?
>>> Since when?
>>>
>>> I wanted to assign a temporary password for a new user and then do
>>>
>>> sudo passwd -e ppatel
>>>
>>> to force it to be changed. For the new user, enforcing password
>>> complexity is, I guess, OK. But for root?
>>
>> If any user should need the enforcement of good passwords, it's the
>> root user. If your PC was on a LAN where crackers can have a go at
>> you, this could be very important. It does not take long for someone
>> to mess up a system if they can get in. It's better to be safe than
>> sorry. To me the obvious thing is to simply pick a better password.
>> e.g. Just make it two words long instead of one.
>
> I was setting a (temporary) password for another user -- not setting
> the root password.
>
> But I guess your comment helps me to understand why these changes
> happen. I cannot be trusted to operate my machine safely without
> someone else's help. I may harm myself, so I am not allowed to set a
> (temporary) password to whatever I want.
>
> I probably shouldn't be allowed to type the rm command without some
> sort of "are you sure?" warning either.
>
> Sigh.
>