I have a question that has been bugging me for a while and was hoping some smart IT guy could explain things to me.
When I type passwords for some sites, what appears on the screen is a series of dots where the characters should be.
My question is, does this provide some form of security as the password is transmitted or does the dot thing only provide security to prevent someone from looking over my shoulder as I am typing? I work at home or in a hotel room when on the road. 99.9% of the time I am typing my passwords there is no one in the room to see what I am typing. I do not work at a Starbucks or public library with folks looking over my shoulder.
Given the increasing complexity of passwords (must have upper and lower case, numbers and special characters, must include emojis and zodiac signs, etc.), it is increasingly important for me to see what the computer thinks I have typed (what I think I have typed is irrelevant). Some web pages give you the option of seeing what you have typed to check it is correct (most do not). A password that has been typed 95% correctly the computer considers 0% correct. I am about 10,000 times more likely to have typed a character wrong than I am to have someone looking over my shoulder to capture my password.
If this affords some sort of security for transmital of the password, I understand. If the "dots in place of characters" system is only designed to stop someone from looking over my shoulder, then it really ticks me off because nobody is looking over my shoulder.
So, IT folks, which is it?
When I type passwords for some sites, what appears on the screen is a series of dots where the characters should be.
My question is, does this provide some form of security as the password is transmitted or does the dot thing only provide security to prevent someone from looking over my shoulder as I am typing? I work at home or in a hotel room when on the road. 99.9% of the time I am typing my passwords there is no one in the room to see what I am typing. I do not work at a Starbucks or public library with folks looking over my shoulder.
Given the increasing complexity of passwords (must have upper and lower case, numbers and special characters, must include emojis and zodiac signs, etc.), it is increasingly important for me to see what the computer thinks I have typed (what I think I have typed is irrelevant). Some web pages give you the option of seeing what you have typed to check it is correct (most do not). A password that has been typed 95% correctly the computer considers 0% correct. I am about 10,000 times more likely to have typed a character wrong than I am to have someone looking over my shoulder to capture my password.
If this affords some sort of security for transmital of the password, I understand. If the "dots in place of characters" system is only designed to stop someone from looking over my shoulder, then it really ticks me off because nobody is looking over my shoulder.
So, IT folks, which is it?