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iced depresso (icedquinn@blob.cat)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 12:10:28 JST iced depresso @ned @Mr_NutterButter text to speech is pretty cheap these days and people like google pretty much run it on 100% of youtube uploads (see: the closed captions button) -
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Sir Nedwood (ned@noauthority.social)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 12:10:29 JST Sir Nedwood @Mr_NutterButter honestly, just recording your voice saying the passwords out loud is probably more secure than steganography. If you have a pattern in the audio data it could be recognised. But would they bother trying text to speech analysis?
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Mr.NutterButter (mr_nutterbutter@gameliberty.club)'s status on Sunday, 26-May-2024 12:10:34 JST Mr.NutterButter I know this is a potential security risk but I honestly need a guaranteed cloud service to store my passwords just in case of a fire and I was wondering if hiding my passwords in music using deep sound with its encryption would be a good idea?
Most people wouldn't even assume that a password would be encrypted into music especially when I have really large music files to begin with because I automatically bloat them with random shit.
I also think that this is a lot better than simply just encrypting a file named passwords.
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For anyone who's curious deep sound is a stagnography program that hides any kind of files into music or images.
It also uses AES 256 encryption so it's fairly strong.
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