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Access Facebook with 3 Different Passwords

Posted on the 17 July 2012 by Sahi

Access Facebook with 3 different passwords

Access facebook with 3 different passwords 3 Diverse passwords can be used to login to yourFACEBOOK.  Appears to be very stimulating isn’t it? Facebook is different from all the other online accounts, which they has solitary password to access, FB lets you login by 3 diverse alternatives of your password. Let us clarifies this to you through the subsequent example: 1. Original Password This is your original password. Let that original password is

myBlogPage


by using the original password you can login. 2. Password through the Case Switched In the overhead password the letters ‘V’ and ‘P’ are in uppercase and the remaining are in the lowercase. If you SWITCH the case where all the UPPERCASE characters are transformed into the lowercase and vice versa, your default password ‘myBlogPage’ would become.

MYbLOGpAGE


Now if you login using the above switched password, your Facebook will admit it and welcomes you! This is the first difference of your default password which is recognized by Facebook. 3. Password with the First Letter Capitalized If the first character of your password is in the lower case, you may just change the first letter to UPPERCASE and facebook will again accept it and let you in. As in case of the above example where your default password is ‘ myBlogPage ’, if you change the first letter to UPPERCASE your password would be ‘MYbLOGpAGE’ and this should work fine as well:

MyBlogPage


This was found out by Emil Protalinski of ZDNET; who also contacted Facebook to inquire about the same and even got a response. With the Facebook engineer for security saying that three forms of the user’s password. This is done for the following reasons.  1. To help users login if they accidentally have caps lock on
2. If an user inadvertently has caps lock on on their mobile device and the first letter is automatically entered in upper case.
3. Since Facebook uses several encryption technologies and does not store passwords in plain text this will not compromise the security of a password. SOURCE: ZDNET

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