T3s|4
o/ dr|z3d - is there a switch or command to force the router to display 'Clock Skew' under Router Info while on /sitemap?
dr|z3d
hi T3s|4. no clockskew, no show.
T3s|4
alright, thanks dr|z3d - I'll keep an eye on that, but it's almost impossible to believe clockskew = 0 ms 24x7, when continuously running ntpd
dr|z3d
less than 1ms and it won't show.
T3s|4
thanks dr|z3d
dr|z3d
we could potentially go down to microseconds, but not sure it's worth the effort. better to save some vertical space :)
T3s|4
yep, dr|z3d - I not only agree with that, but also on your chat with eyedeekay about the need for only ONE password when accessing SusiMail. If me/anyone else needs an extra layer of encryption, I assume 'most' are capable of providing that on their own :D
dr|z3d
what we could do is provide a password complexity evaluator bar or similar that lets the user know how secure their password is, in combination with an in-susimail password change option.
T3s|4
those approaches are fine, provided encrypted storage is provided by default, similar to all ProtonMail accounts
dr|z3d
sure, that's my preference, one password.
T3s|4
yep
T3s|4
dr|z3d: I recall when ProtonMail (PM) was still in its very earliest stages of public beta-testing, PM required TWO passwords (server and account, iirc) to access your eMail. After much pushback, PM dropped their double-hoop jumping exercise. Today, I control 10+ PM accounts - and never has one been comprised - to your point - using my highly complex, self-generated passwords
T3s|4
required to access each account :)
dr|z3d
:)
T3s|4
My God: *compromised :D
eyedeekay
I'm not talking about actually needing to use 2 passwords just to log in, I'm talking about encrypting the login password in the local storage and using the local storage password to unlock the login password and send it automatically, so the password you use to log in to postman on say an android device isn't also the password to your locally stored mail on your laptop. When using SusiMail would only need to
eyedeekay
enter the local storage password, the logon password could be saved securely.
eyedeekay
If you wanted, you could have your remote-brute-force-proof 35-character random login password encrypted with a more memorable local pin
T3s|4_
eyedeekay: thanks for your additional clarification. I'm quite willing to test any proposed approach in a future dev release and provide end-user feedback