 Salt a table at Password Hacking Village? Get out. Go. Done. So we're in the Password Village, and it's awesome because there's so much, it's grown from a small contest, and now it's a village. Yep. So it's not just Crack Me If You Can, it's other things now too. And almost like Crack Me If You Can, it's like in its 17th year. It's still going on. The professional teams, Team Hashcat, John Ripper, and all these other teams, they're going at it. But what we eventually figured out was, let's teach newts. And so we're still doing the contest, but now we literally just have GPU machines up. We say, oh, do you wanna know how to do this? And we teach them. I did have a 13-year-old yesterday, and she cracked, you know, she had a social engineer, the password hints out of me. There was like an eight-year-old yesterday came through, and we taught them in 10 or 15 minutes. What's so cool about this is like, oftentimes we see like, we'll say John the Ripper or Hashcat, and you see them up on GitHub, and you imagine these teams are like way lofty up there, and they're not real people, it's a corporation or something. And that's the thing I always loved about this contest is you have the actual developers here, and as goofy as it sounds like they're real people, they're approachable, they love what they do. I mean, you know, we have new people on the team this year, and it's literally people from Hashcat who came in from Europe, and if you like run rules, you'll see like a rule that's like the toxic rule. And people are like, oh, and I'm like, yeah, that's that guy. Like he's five feet that way. That is so cool, I love it. Yeah, you know, and so it's really nice, but I mean, that would be cool, but the fact that everyone uses passwords, everyone thinks they know how to do it, but our little circle of nerds is shrinking. And so we're trying to get some new blood into, you know. Yeah, into it, you know, it's great about this. I love the display. I love like, for instance, the competition, but also it comes out of this, not only is you come here to learn, but then what comes onto this is they end up patching their software. They learn during the conference, or they go, ooh, this is a tweak, and then you see patches after the conference. I mean, right before I was talking to you, a guy was sitting there and they, at his work, bought a GPU machine and started cracking their own, you know, and he was like, how do I get better? And I was like, oh my God, buy me a beer. Like, let's go. I will literally talk to you to on blue in the face because he was his past beginner stuff. He wanted the advanced stuff. And what's so cool too is it's not just like, you go, okay, GPU brute force, yeah, I can crack, but then you start seeing passwords, which like, in theory, should be cracked. Were there like 32 character passwords here and you're like, how is that happening? And then they're walking you through and it's like, oh, we did a dictionary attack. There was a 32 character password was cracked fast because it looks random, but no, it's two massive keyboard blocks right next to the show. Like, seeing like 32, 40 character passwords, like it's unheard of, but you're seeing it here. Yeah, and William, that's one pattern out of a hundred, like, tight patterns. Because the guy yesterday was like, oh, I do finger patterns. And he's like, I'm not gonna stop. How do I make them better? And so like, I was like, capitalized in the middle. And he was like, okay. And I was like, well, I didn't really win the battle or the war for him, but I made him a little bit better. One question, which is, if I wanted to get started, where are some of the places I would go for good resources to start learning? Right, so there's a lot of like, blog posts and things like that. There's a few sites that do it. We run password village.org or .com and it's year round and it is, we just had our expert friends right up. Everything from how to run it, how to install it. But then, if you wanna build a machine that doesn't catch fire, you know, we got the experts that build, you know, $30,000 machines that we run at work and they fully wrote up every tweak they do, how they make it so they're not powered, break. I mean, they wrote up all the stuff and like. Last question and we're trying to upset at least 50% of the audience. Okay, okay. Am, D or NVIDIA? Okay, okay. Now, right now, NVIDIA, okay? AMD made faster cards but then they put restrictions on their licenses and everyone got angry. So, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Right now, it's still NVIDIA. So you heard it right here. Use NVIDIA, burn all of your AMD. No, I'm just kidding. I'll buy them used though. If the drivers weren't, I don't know. Their licenses are a little wonky, but they're getting better. But do not buy Teslas, do not buy the big research ones. AWS, those GPUs are terrible. Go to Best Buy, buy the most expensive one and that's. I mean, there's been some cool services like NPK and whatnot which try and take advantage of like the serverless, but they're still not the most efficient. Anyway, thank you so much for what you do. There's so much going on. I know you need to get back to it. Thank you for your time. Thank you for watching and hack on. I could crack all of these with my rainbow tables. Oh my gosh, you're 10 years too late. Why are rainbow tables not used anymore? Their GPUs are so fast. It's ridiculous that rainbow tables, which were once ubiquitous, they're disc dependent. You're using disc speed. Well, GPUs have just so drastically increased that in one machine, the GPUs is faster than the rainbow tables. But it's the word everybody knows. I'm sorry. Yeah, I said. I'll add 20 for it. Yeah.