easier to unlock screen
Written by theQxQ the 26 Oct 12 at 17:04.
New
I find myself constintly locking the screen to do something as simple as getting a drink of water. yet when I come back a minuet later, I have to type in my huge password, meant to keep people from hacking in while it's shut down. I don't need that much securty while my computer is locked for just a couple minuets, just something small to keep someone from posting something unwanted want while I'm away.
Solution #2:
facial reconization
Written by
theQxQ the 26 Oct 12 at 17:07.
allow an option to do facial reconization. an becaue facial reconization can be unreliable, allow the option to only allow facial reconizaion untill a few minuets after locking the screen.
allow an option to do facial reconization. an becaue facial reconization can be unreliable, allow the option to only allow facial reconizaion untill a few minuets after locking the screen.
Solution #3:
use a "draw to unlock" password.
Written by
theQxQ the 26 Oct 12 at 17:14.
allow the option to draw lines from one point to the next to unlock the screen. this can be very secure and much faster then normal passwords. this can also be very secure. if you specify that your mouse has to get to a certain point in a screen before, or after some point in time since you were at a previose point, your password could become very secure.
allow the option to draw lines from one point to the next to unlock the screen. this can be very secure and much faster then normal passwords. this can also be very secure. if you specify that your mouse has to get to a certain point in a screen before, or after some point in time since you were at a previose point, your password could become very secure.
Solution #4:
use key-down and key-up events when typing a password.
Written by
theQxQ the 26 Oct 12 at 17:21.
when you hold shift while pushing a letter, you get a capital letter, making your password a lot stronger. what if you could hold any key while making your password. it would be unbreakable. so a password would be something like this.
(p-down, a-down, p-up, s-down, s-up, s-down, s-up, a-up, w-down, o-down, r-down, d-down, r-up, d-up, o-up, w-up)
this would be just as quick as typin in your password, but thousand times more secure. so people can make a smaller password, with less worry about hacking. (this technocly makes a normal password stored twice as long, which make tons more possible password). it also makes it harder for someone looking over your sholder to figure out what you are typing in.
when you hold shift while pushing a letter, you get a capital letter, making your password a lot stronger. what if you could hold any key while making your password. it would be unbreakable. so a password would be something like this.
(p-down, a-down, p-up, s-down, s-up, s-down, s-up, a-up, w-down, o-down, r-down, d-down, r-up, d-up, o-up, w-up)
this would be just as quick as typin in your password, but thousand times more secure. so people can make a smaller password, with less worry about hacking. (this technocly makes a normal password stored twice as long, which make tons more possible password). it also makes it harder for someone looking over your sholder to figure out what you are typing in.
Solution #5:
#1 and add the relevant security warning
Written by
Ssdg the 6 Nov 12 at 08:59.
Problem: I gave my sister my Android phone locked with a pattern, she looked at the screen and unlocked it with no hint from me. Why? because the pattern is often visible on the screen because of the trace your fingers leave.
As it is obviously a feature lots of people want, it seams important to tell them its protection is weak (at best)
Problem: I gave my sister my Android phone locked with a pattern, she looked at the screen and unlocked it with no hint from me. Why? because the pattern is often visible on the screen because of the trace your fingers leave.
As it is obviously a feature lots of people want, it seams important to tell them its protection is weak (at best)
Solution #6:
Add an "Alternative Login Options" configuation dialog.
Cannonical can add a dialog which lets users configure how they want to log in. An example mockup (license CC-BY-NC-SA) can be found at http://i.minus.com/iEalX8rXItStK.png .