Password
Strength:
How Strong Is Your Password?
How Strong Is Your Password?
TECHNOLOGY | By Richard Darell
Internet security has always been a continuously evolving issue
we’ve all had to deal with at one point or another. There are new and stronger
security measures created on a daily basis, and yet they
keep being overridden by crackers all over the world. This is usually not due
to the security strength of the server or the code on it.
It usually comes down to the user and what password he or she has chosen for
the account. You might start to wonder how clever people think they are when
they choose passwords like “123456” and “password” and think it’s
a good decision. The thing is, your password strength is only as hard to crack as
it is for you to remember. The harder it is to remember, the harder it
will be to crack. It’s as simple as that.
There is a significant password strength increase when you go
from 5 to 6 characters in your password. And when you hit 9 characters (upper
case password), it will take a computer approximately 178 years to crack it.
That should be enough time to spend on whatever you want to do on the Internet,
wouldn’t you think? So, if you are one of those people who is sporting a
somewhat weak (according to this infographic) password on your different online
services, it’s a good time to change them all.
Password strength comes down to creativity. Family members,
keyboard patterns and swipes are infinitely out of the question. These are the
first words a cracker tries, and you would be surprised if you knew how many
people set their password strength to an almost playful challenge for a
cracker. An infographic from SecurityCoverage(design
by Space
Chimp Media) showcases data from a few of the largest password
breaches in the history of the Internet. The interesting thing is that out of
the 30 million accounts that were cracked on RockYou.com, an insane 290,731 people
had the password “123456.” My head spun out of orbit over that.
Do yourself a huge favor and take a gander at your password farm
and see if you can’t extend them to 9 characters (and to include upper case
letters and symbols), and you could probably give crackers a headache for
at least 178 years or so. Make sure your password strength is up to par with
the level of personal information you have submitted to your online services.
You will definitely save yourself a lot of time and sorrow by taking ten
minutes to up your password strength and look through them all every once in a
while. Once again remember, your password strength is only as good as it
is hard to remember the password itself . . . .
From Bit Rebels
Peter’s
Piece
There is lots of misinformation about passwords. Consider this:
You should have a separate password everything that you do on
the internet including bank accounts, work emails, private emails, website,
blog, Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, Pinit, Redit, Delicious, Amazon, Ebay, Paypal,
stock exchange, Stumbleupon, all government sites requiring a login, and an
endless list of other places you may have to remember a password for.
Forget password worries
Relax with a good book
Now available as an e-book from Smashwords.com
HAPPY READING
Then we are told that we must never write our passwords down anywhere
and we should commit them to memory and change them every month. This could be
a reason why otherwise intelligent people resort to 123456. These people have
real logic. Next month they can change to 7891011. Personally, I prefer
101102103. No hacker would ever break that one.
Some advisers would have you walking down the street mumbling
incomprehensible passwords under your breath as you try to commit them to
memory before it’s time to change them all again.
But seriously, some of this advice should not be taken too
seriously. If you have a strong password there should be no need to change it
on a schedule. If your bank account password has been broken your money will be
stolen within minutes rather than at the end of the month and you will
certainly need to change your password immediately anytime you think it may
have been compromised.
Care must always be taken on sites like Facebook that display
personal information. The big don’ts here are don’t display your full name, full
date of birth, phone number or street address. If your name is William John
Smith you should consider being just Bill Smith. Friends looking for you will
know from checking your profile if you are the right Smith.
Never display information on a public site that you have registered
somewhere as a security question. Likewise, if your parents are prominent
people, or their families have lived in the same district for several
generations, don’t use your mother’s maiden name as a security question.