Theoretically, english speakers will likely use english passwords, non-english speakers will likely use non-english passwords.
While it seems logical, I don't have statistics to back up that assertion.
I guess it adds a significant level of randomness to the password if you mix them with other chars, which is great, but the total length is still the most critical element, to me, as there are wordlists for all alphabets and charsets.
Thanks!
Theoretically, english speakers will likely use english passwords, non-english speakers will likely use non-english passwords.
While it seems logical, I don't have statistics to back up that assertion.
I guess it adds a significant level of randomness to the password if you mix them with other chars, which is great, but the total length is still the most critical element, to me, as there are wordlists for all alphabets and charsets.
As a greek person personally I've never used a greek character in a password and I don't think anyone really does