Imagine if Facebook charged you $5 to reset your password.
TLS isn't like say, LDAP integration. One of those is a fancy enterprise feature you can totally charge for (and probably should), and one of those is a basic critical feature.
It would be unethical to charge $400/year to properly store user passwords as hashed instead of plaintext, wouldn't it?
TLS isn't like say, LDAP integration. One of those is a fancy enterprise feature you can totally charge for (and probably should), and one of those is a basic critical feature.
It would be unethical to charge $400/year to properly store user passwords as hashed instead of plaintext, wouldn't it?