Is there a significance to the word "salt" for a password salt?
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http://www.derkeiler.com/Newsgroups/comp.security.misc/2003-05/0154.html
Edit: Apparently, there's no strong evidence even for the original "salting" of Carthage (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salting_the_earth) claim, but an interesting hypothesis ensued nonetheless. |
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The only meaning is that you are adding something to your password before you hash it, similarly to adding salt to your meal :-) |
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Because before you hash the password, you add a random text to it. So, it looks like as if you add some "salt" to the original "food" ... password :) |
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Maybe because salt goes well with hash? |
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I would guess because it's easy to add "salt" (NaCl or a fixed string). But once you do, the output is irrevocably changed (food, encrypted password). |
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According to Ken Thompson, one of the first people to use the term in a book, it's related to the term "salting a mine", referring to gold mines. Whether that is "correct" or not who knows? I doubt there's an actual correct answer to this, it's just one of those terms that doesn't really have to have a reason as long as what it means is understood. |
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Unsalted passwords are too plain. Being simple text, an unsalted password is typically shorter than the side of the hash, thus ensuring that only a subset of hash outputs are possible. This means that hashes of passwords are suceptible to dictionary attacks and/or other cryptographic analysis based on the reduced keyspace. salting the password with random, or even fixed data, removes or mitigates these attack vectors. |
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Once you add salt to food the real taste is no longer visible. So basically this is a figurative saying; add a little salt and it changes the original dish. |
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I had thought it related to the verb salt ...
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