At a glance, the passwords the LLMs created looked secure, much like those that a password generator might spit out. But that’s exactly where the problems arose: Although the AI-generated passwords appeared to be complex and safe to use for securing online accounts, they were actually quite predictable upon closer inspection.
All three LLMs exhibited clearly identifiable patterns in how they created these passwords. These patterns included repeated character strings, predictable password structure, frequent reuse of similar characters, clear biases toward certain numbers and letters, and even duplicate passwords in some cases. Although the AI-generated passwords looked random, they really weren’t. This could easily create a false sense of security if you were to use these predictable passwords for your online accounts.


which dumbass lets LLMs generate their passwords?
What do you mean. Why would it be a problem that my password is the most statistically likely sequence of characters in the world? And that the password is stored in plaintext in a chat log? And used for training LLMs on password conversations?
I just set my password to hunter2, no one will ever figure it out.
What is that? All I see is *******.
Let me test that
JsfJhdYhb57’j4++€€djF
Shit 😩
Don’t put a quote mark in your password! I learned the hard way with password’drop table users;’
/S
Wait, was this because you too had a student named “Robert’); DROP TABLE users;–”?
What are some strings I could add to my passwords to hopefully prevent their darknet spread just a little bit?
I just use the same combination that I have on my luggage
1234?
0000!
If someone I knew told me they asked an LLM to generate their password, I would no longer talk to that person.
Alright then, Tobis, it was fun speaking to you 👍
Me! Me! Me!
dumbass
That was uncalled for 😞