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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T15:48:24+00:00 2026-05-10T15:48:24+00:00

Is there anything available that isn’t trivially breakable?

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Is there anything available that isn’t trivially breakable?

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  1. 2026-05-10T15:48:25+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 3:48 pm

    This 2008 answer is now dangerously out of date. SHA (all variants) is now trivially breakable, and best practice is now (as of Jan 2013) to use a key-stretching hash (like PBKDF2) or ideally a RAM intensive one (like Bcrypt) and to add a per-user salt too.

    Points 2, 3 and 4 are still worth paying attention to.

    See the IT Security SE site for more.


    Original 2008 answer:

    1. Use a proven algorithm. SHA-256 uses 64 characters in the database, but with an index on the column that isn’t a problem, and it is a proven hash and more reliable than MD5 and SHA-1. It’s also implemented in most languages as part of the standard security suite. However don’t feel bad if you use SHA-1.

    2. Don’t just hash the password, but put other information in it as well. You often use the hash of "username:password:salt" or similar, rather than just the password, but if you play with this then you make it even harder to run a dictionary attack.

    3. Security is a tough field, do not think you can invent your own algorithms and protocols.

    4. Don’t write logs like "[AddUser] Hash of GeorgeBush:Rep4Lyfe:ASOIJNTY is xyz"

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