How To Make Your Passwords Safer Than White House
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Truth is there is no perfect password! The thing is different sites seem to operate a whole different format that contradicts its former. This really makes it a big pain to get your hands on a particularly distinct random password which would fill in for every account. Even this is impossible, except you are wholly a computer; but sadly no computer has blood running in it. So you wouldn’t be doing this.
This sense of frustration leads the way to a general nonchalance as we don’t even bother to look to safety practices as to managing our passwords. We feel: “may be we are not too important to be hacked, and there is even less we could do as even the high and mighty are still eventually hacked”.
I was really upset when I learnt some hacker could amass 272 million passwords for major email services spanning across Gmail, Yahoo Mail Hotmail and even Mail.Ru which happens to be Russia’s No. 1 email service. Well even some crimes are applaudable, there are some gifted crimes one commits that makes the cop arresting him ask for a selfie first before handcuffing him. But forgive me this is definitely not one of those special criminal feats. I would rather attribute this to general carelessness of the victims whose passwords were stolen.
There are these basic rules to managing your password. Yes, they are basic; but they are not too basic to ensure your safety online. Let us look at them.
Making use of the same password again and again everywhere online puts you straight at the hacker’s trigger
When you depend on very common passwords like “12345” and “password” and even “letmein.” The three aforementioned have been three are ranked as the three worst possible passwords to use by Team IDs last year.
They are just too common. Hackers are going to first try them as they believe they feel this could be among your first choice of hurried passwords.
Make sure you don’t use “qwerty” for a password.
Make sure you don’t use the “qwerty” format for a password. Hackers try their hands on passwords formed from compiling stretches of keyboard-format” words. So should you be using “qwerty” format, you know you don’t have an Achilles heel. After all, an Achilles heel is is supposed to be a hidden weakness but a “qwerty” format password here is all too public to be secret.
Now how can you increase the height of the fence around your password making it hard to be scaled:
Make use of complicated passwords
Although this sounds demanding, I’m sorry it is best practice. Avoid using information like popular names of your pet which could be seen on your Facebook page as well as your Twitter account. So make sure to generate passwords on a random scale. I feel the best shot you get is at those which employ numerical as well as special characters like $ and % and # — stuff like this.
Now I know you will be thinking if I see you as some Einstein reincarnate to completely memorize all your passwords. No, you don’t have to memorize all of it.
Simply make use of a password manager
Software developers are well versed with the knowledge that memorizing passwords is no easy task for all. As such they have created password managers, like 1Password and LastPass. I think both are well sophisticated to fill in as an wardrobe for your passwords.
Though there is no 100% security in password mangers, yet it is a more realistic approach to keeping your passwords safer.
And even if you’re using a password manager…
Please ensure you don’t make use of the same password for different accounts
One thing that makes a hacker’s job easy is the laziness of his victim. If they can successfully steal just one of your passwords, be sure they are going to try it on all of your accounts. So you know if they have your password to your twitter account, and if it has the compatible number of characters, the hacker wouldn’t mind trying it on your bank account!
So you see it fits you best when you wear a shin guard against rough tackles from hackers by using unique passwords
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