
thumb|Five dice showing 4-1-2-5-6, which denotation|denotes "monogram" on an updated EFF cryptographic word list
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata · CC0
thumb|Five dice showing 4-1-2-5-6, which denotation|denotes "monogram" on an updated EFF cryptographic word list
Diceware is a method for creating passphrases, passwords, and other cryptographic variables using ordinary dice as a hardware random number generator. For each word in the passphrase, five rolls of a six-sided die are required. The numbers from 1 to 6 that come up in the rolls are assembled as a five-digit number, e.g. 43146. That number is then used to look up a word in a cryptographic word list. In the original Diceware list 43146 corresponds to munch. By generating several words in sequence, a lengthy passphrase can thus be constructed randomly.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).