A string of words and characters that you type in to authenticate yourself. Passphrases differ from passwords only in length. Passwords are usually short - six to ten characters. Passphrases are usually much longer - up to 100 characters or more. Their greater length makes passphrases more secure. Modern passphrases were invented by Sigmund N. Porter in 1982. Phil Zimmermann' s popular encryption program href="module.php?name=Lexikon&file=search&eid=1&query=PGP">PGP, for example, requires you to make up a passphrase that you then must enter whenever you sign or decrypt messages. href="http://world.std.com/~reinhold/diceware.page.html">. (1996-12-21)