Password protection is a big issue in
the growing technology age, but how do you ensure that you are building a
code that will work overtime to keep out hackers?
PasswordGenie
this week released an infographic displaying characteristics of weak
and common passwords, and offering a few tips on how to keep your data
safe.
With so many websites to sign into and too many passwords to remember, most people try to ease the process by using the same code, or simply typing a series of consecutive numbers or letters. But, as PasswordGenie points out, "hackers feast on such lax security measures and can obtain your information much easier than you might think."
Your
name or birthday, common words, and other easy-to-remember combinations
are those most likely to be discovered and bypassed. Also, friends' and
family members' names, words in the dictionary, and common names (John,
Robert, Elizabeth, Jennifer) are no-nos, as are repeating your
username/login information or simply swiping the keyboard ("qwerty" or
"asdfgh").
Despite websites that urge
users to create a password with more than six characters, as well as a
combination of lower- and uppercase letters, digits, and special
characters, few people follow the rules. PasswordGenie reported that
only 30 percent bang out seven or more characters, while 16 percent
focus only on digits, 40 percent use only lowercase letters, and less
than 4 percent type a special character or two.
But
how much do those guidelines really matter? A lot, according to
PasswordGenie, which calculated a rough number of hours (or days, or
years, or even millennia) that a computer would likely need to crack
different passwords of varying strengths.
Unsurprisingly,
the all-lowercase, six-character code would last about 10 minutes. Even
a seven-character password stitched together with numbers and symbols
would take only four years to decipher.
If
you're really looking for a steady password, try typing in a mish-mash
of eight numbers and symbols–the computer won't be able to access your
data for about 463 years. Even better: nine or more special characters
will keep you secure for about 44,530 years.
Users
of Yahoo and LinkedIn have been the victims of recent password
breaches, which turned up the news that "123456," "work," "abc123,"
"123456789," and "the" were among the 10 most popular user passwords in
each situation. A whopping 119 people used the word "sex" as their
LinkedIn passcode.
Don't feel bad if
you are logging into your email, social networks, favorite online
retailers, and all other sites with only a handful of different
passwords. According to PasswordGenie, the average user visits 25
password-protected sites, but only uses six separate codes. In fact, 33
percent of people use the same password for every site.
For more, see Password Genie's full infographic below.






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