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Password.txt is a command-line utility that lets you encrypt and decrypt text from the terminal using the standard Unix tool,cat. It stores encrypted data in a .txt file but doesn't require any additional files to be present on your system: just drag and drop your plaintext somewhere into the terminal window and it'll work its magic. With Password. txt you can encrypt data, store sensitive information safely in a .txt file, and decrypt it later. You can treat your TextEdit documents as encrypted TiddlyWiki pages for super-secure local storage. There are no third-party dependencies. There is nothing to install or configure. Password.txt employs a so-called "confusion" cipher that uses a highly randomized keystream to obscure the original plaintext. Its confusion mode is different from that used by other programs but shares many traits if implemented correctly: readable output, impossible to crack with offline methods, no separate symmetric encryption key required, and almost impossible to crack using brute-force methods on its output absent contextual information about the input. The latest Password.txt release version is 2.1 (released September, 23, 2017). Powerful scripting capabilities abound: encrypted text can be written to a file, uploaded to a web server, saved to Dropbox or Google Drive, etc; files can be easily deleted or overwritten; decrypted text can also be read into applications that prefer plaintext input (Wordpad for instance); encrypted data can be easily reverted back to unencrypted form; and decrypted data can also be overwritten with new content. The scripting language allows for the creation of complex scenarios without having to rely on external tools or programs.Password. txt has been featured in several publications including: By Mark Leino, Computerworld - http://www.computerworld.com/article/3315240/security/password-txt-encrypts-your-text-documents-with-a-simple-command.html By Warren Mercer, Hackaday - http://hackaday.com/2012/09/21/passwordlessbookmarksonjava/?utm_content=buffer6a066&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer By Aaron Costanzo from the Slickdeals blog - https://www.slickdeals.net/forums/showpost. php?p=114913226&postcount=1 By YouTube user Stephen Toub - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7VHWgfHnEiI&feature=youtu.be There has been a related tool called "pwd" made for Minix by Peter Salz, which also uses the "cat" command to encrypt data. Here is additional documentation on it: http://minix1.freebert.net/~psalz/pwd/docs/manual/pwd-manual-2Due to security concerns about having a Python interpreter embedded in a tool that contains a scripting language, Password. cfa1e77820
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