diff --git a/public/site/2015-05/_config.yml b/public/site/2015-05/_config.yml
index 1c5e5bc9..d0553a23 100644
--- a/public/site/2015-05/_config.yml
+++ b/public/site/2015-05/_config.yml
@@ -1,21 +1,5 @@
-# Welcome to Jekyll!
-#
-# This config file is meant for settings that affect your whole blog, values
-# which you are expected to set up once and rarely need to edit after that.
-# For technical reasons, this file is *NOT* reloaded automatically when you use
-# 'jekyll serve'. If you change this file, please restart the server process.
-
-# Site settings
-title: Your awesome title
-email: your-email@domain.com
-description: > # this means to ignore newlines until "baseurl:"
- Write an awesome description for your new site here. You can edit this
- line in _config.yml. It will appear in your document head meta (for
- Google search results) and in your feed.xml site description.
-baseurl: "" # the subpath of your site, e.g. /blog
-url: "http://yourdomain.com" # the base hostname & protocol for your site
-twitter_username: jekyllrb
-github_username: jekyll
-
-# Build settings
+title: Master Password
+email: info@masterpasswordapp.com
+url: "http://masterpasswordapp.com"
+github_username: Lyndir
markdown: kramdown
diff --git a/public/site/2015-05/_includes/header.html b/public/site/2015-05/_includes/header.html
index 03b4109f..59c7520e 100644
--- a/public/site/2015-05/_includes/header.html
+++ b/public/site/2015-05/_includes/header.html
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
- Passwords have slowly become regarded as a "necessary evil" to having accounts online. We accept they are they way things are done and try to adapt. Sites everywhere expect us to come up with a secure and unique password for them. We try our best to compensate for this unrealistic demand; we keep track of passwords in note books, apps, on our computers, or we simplify them so we won't forget. We all struggle so hard, trying to keep our accounts secure. But we're admittedly terrible at it, and what's more, we really don't want to have to bother with it. There's a lot of noise about passwords lately. Accounts of popular people and friends alike getting hacked. Huge data leaks have become common news. And every time we're reminded of our need to be good virtual citizens — Do you really have passwords? Or does something or someone else have them for you? You walk up to the entrance of an invite-only night club. Passwords are secrets which we are expected to remember. Writing passwords down is highly frowned upon — and rightly so. The secret leaves your head and is out in the open. It's like confiding in your friend, and then she goes and puts it in her diary, which anyone could find. Things we know are things we can keep secret, they are locked away safely in our head where none can get to them. And yet, we are now expected by websites everywhere, to make and remember secret passwords for each of them, while also making them non-personal and unique? This is intolerable. No wonder many of us defect and write our passwords down wherever we can — often in the form of digital notes or password "vaults". But this is a panicked reaction to a problem we simply don't know how to handle: Master Password is the answer to the problem websites put on us. Master Password is not a password manager. It is not a secure vault or a digital notebook. It is something else entirely, and yet something so simple. Think of it, as a store-bought calculator. If your name was Now, remember only your name and one password. Your master password. Forget everything else. With Master Password you leave no passwords laying around. You no longer store passwords in commercial, proprietory apps and no longer send them off to the cloud. You are no longer tied to your laptop or the internet if you need to look one up. Even if a personal or natural catastrophe causes you loss, you can never lose your account passwords — all you ever need is your one and only master password and anyone's Master Password calculator. Humans are no good at remembering lots of passwords. But writing them down or saving them is dangerous, too. Master Password avoids all the pitfalls: a cryptographic algorithm calculates your site's password for you, from thin air, only when you need it.
+ Master Password's unique approach makes you safer from loss, theft, problems with backups, sync, confiscation, snooping, and more.
+ Let's see how Master Password could help you:
+
+ Master Password was designed to generate high-entropy cryptographically strong and unique passwords for each of your sites.
+ Password vaults come with many caveats and render you dependant upon your app and your phone. You could lose either, your device could be stolen or your data copied. And how much should we really be trusting the Cloud?
+ It seems like every month we hear about a new high-profile data leak or foreign hack. How much can we really trust that our passwords are safe in the cloud?
+ Sharing passwords is a great way to give trusted people access to your accounts. But what happens when a relationship degrades? Especially if these passwords you shared were used for many of your accounts?
+ This is the core problem with passwords: we need to be able to remember them.
- Passwords are frustrating.
+
+ What's your ?
+
+ But upon reflection, we find that we've adapted quite poorly.
+
+ We've become symptomatic.
- keep good passwords
, use unique passwords for every site
, nothing predictable or simple
. How do we keep up?
And even more importantly so, how do we keep safe without sacrificing our freedom for that safety?
- A password is something you know,
-
-
- not something you have.
- At the entrance, a large man, thick leather vest, stops you in your tracks. Password, please?
-
- Things we have, car keys, a badge, the garage remote, are things we can lose or get stolen from us. We need to keep them safe, protected and always on-hand. This is a real hassle, and we don't want that headache for our dozens of passwords.
The problem of passwords for everything.
- Know one password.
-
-
- Generate all the others.1337
, your master password was 5317
and your site was named 707.993
, take any calculator in the world and type in 1337 + 5317 + 707.993
to get your site's account password, = 7361.993
.
- Master Password performs a similar but cryptographically secure operation, while making everything else easy for you.
-
+ The real issue.
+
+ When you're done, it throws the password out of memory, so it can't be stolen.
+
+
+ Humans are not good at thinking of strong passwords, use the password created for your site by Master Password. Your accounts will become as safe as they can be against hacks, hoaxes and leaks.
+
+ Master Password operates completely off-line. It saves no secrets on your device, meaning there's nothing to lose or copy. Just like a store-bought calculator, you can lose it and replace it with a new one, and still get the exact same results, making you immune to loss.
+
+ Master Password was designed to operate entirely off-line, keeping all of your secrets close to heart. They don't even get saved on your phone after you look them up, meaning there's nothing left to steal or confiscate. Take back control over your own identity.
+
+ Master Password is based on the principle that each account should have its own dedicated password. Sharing passwords is fine; if you need to rescind a password, all you need to do is increment the site's counter in Master Password and update the account with the new password we've generated for you, locking out the people you need no longer trust.
+
+ Master Password solves this by embracing the fact that it is impossible to remember passwords for sites. Instead, remember only one password: your master password. Use it only with your Master Password app to look up the key to use for logging into any site you like.
+
Master Password is the answer to the problem that websites have forced on us.
+Master Password is not a password manager. It is not a secure vault or a digital notebook. It is something else entirely, and yet something so simple.
+Think of it as, a store-bought calculator. If your name was 1337
, your master password was 5317
and your site was named 707
, take any calculator in the world and type in 1337 + 5317 + 707
to get your site's account password, = 7361
.
+ | |||
---|---|---|---|
+ + | ++ + | ++ + | ++ + | +
+ + | ++ + | ++ + | ++ + | +
+ + | ++ + | ++ + | ++ + | +
+ + | ++ + | +
Can somebody steal your password? Just hit .
+ What are you going to do if you forget your site's password? Just redo the math.
+ What if you lose or break your device? Borrow a buddy's, get a new one, math is universal.
+ Does a calculator need to sync with the cloud before you can use it? No, just remember your own name and master password.
This is the freedom Master Password gives you.
+ Master Password performs a similar but cryptographically secure operation, while making everything else easy for you.
With Master Password you leave no passwords laying around. You no longer store passwords in commercial, proprietory apps and no longer send them off to the cloud. You are no longer tied to your laptop or the internet if you need to look one up. Even if a personal or natural catastrophe causes you loss, you can never lose your account passwords — all you ever need is your one and only secret master password and anyone's Master Password calculator app.
+ + +We all struggle so hard, trying to keep our accounts secure.
+But we're admittedly terrible at it, and what's more, we really don't want to have to bother with it.
+There's a lot of noise about passwords lately. Accounts of popular people and friends alike getting hacked. Huge data leaks have become common news. And every time we're reminded of our need to be good virtual citizens — keep good passwords
, use unique passwords for every site
, nothing predictable or simple
. How do we keep up?
And even more importantly so, how do we keep safe without sacrificing our freedom for that safety?
Do you really have passwords?
+ Or does something or someone else have them for you?
You walk up to the entrance of an invite-only night club.
+ At the entrance, a large man, thick leather vest, stops you in your tracks. Password, please?
Passwords are secrets which we are expected to remember. Writing passwords down is highly frowned upon — and rightly so. The secret leaves your head and is out in the open. It's like confiding in your friend, and then she goes and puts it in her diary, which anyone could find.
+Things we have — car keys, a badge, the garage remote — are things we can lose or get stolen. We need to keep them safe, protected and always on-hand. This is a real hassle, and we don't want that headache for our dozens of passwords.
+ Things we know are things we can keep secret, they are locked away safely in our head where none can get to them.
And yet, we are now expected by websites everywhere, to make and remember secret passwords for each of them, while also making them non-personal and unique? This is intolerable. No wonder many of us defect and write our passwords down wherever we can — often in the form of digital notes or password "vaults".
+But this is a panicked reaction to a problem we simply don't know how to handle:
+ The problem of passwords for everything.