Hacking time itself 😏 now that's cool
Security researchers have cracked a password to recover over $3 million of bitcoin that had been stuck in a crypto wallet for 11 years - The password was a series of 20 upper and lower case letters, as well as numbers, that had been designed to be as difficult as possible to crack.
“I generated the password, I copied it, put it in the passphrase of the wallet, and also in a text file that I then encrypted,” the wallet’s owner, who chose to remain anonymous, said in a video published by Mr Grand.
"While RoboForm’s passwords appear to be randomly generated, they’re not. With the older versions of this software, if we can control the time, we can control the password.”
He figured out that if he was able to trick the system that it was the moment in 2013 when the password was generated, then it would recreate the same password.
RoboForm password generator has since updated its platform to improve the randomness of its tool, meaning the time-based hacking approach no longer works with passwords created after 2015.