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The Top 10 Passwords You Should Never Use!

The Top 10 Passwords You Should Never Use!

 

 

According to a report, most users still haven't answered the call by
security experts to implement more robust passwords. In fact, in a
list of the most easy to hack passwords, simply typing '123456' took a
truly forgettable top prize.

Security firm Imperva recently released its list of the passwords most
likely to be hacked based on 32 million instances of successful
hacking. Imperva named their report "Consumer Password Worst
Practices," and some of the entries near the top are truly simple. Here’s a LINK to the report.

 

Worst Password Practices

The top three passwords all included the simple streaming of numbers:
first '123456' followed by '12345' and then '123456789'. Similar
entries reappeared at eight and nine on a top ten list. However, the
fourth most-hacked password was actually just the word 'Password'
followed by 'iloveyou' and 'princess' at spots five and six. (Source:
computerworld.com)

What the report shows is that people still aren't using effective
strategies to protect their sensitive information online. Using these
kinds of passwords to protect your email account or, worse yet,
banking information, could lead to theft or identity fraud.

Top 10 Worst Passwords

The following is a list of the most predictable passwords, and should
not be used under any circumstances (Source: pcworld.com):

1. 123456
2. 12345
3. 123456789
4. Password
5. iloveyou
6. princess
7. rockyou
8. 1234567
9. 12345678
10. abc123

How to Strengthen Your Passwords

Other key findings in the report: it seems that almost 1 in 3 users
choose passwords comprised of six or fewer characters; more than half
use passwords based on only alpha-numeric characters; and almost 50
per cent used variations on their name, popular slang terms, or simple
strings of consecutive characters from the average QWERTY keyboard --
such as 'asdfg'.

Imperva has made several obvious recommendations, suggesting most
users adopt passwords with at least eight characters and to mix those
characters between upper and lower case letters, numbers, and symbols:

Recommendations

Users:

1. Choose a strong password for sites you care for the privacy of the information you
store. Bruce Schneir’s advice is useful: “take a sentence and turn it into a password.
Something like “This little piggy went to market” might become "tlpWENT2m".
That nine-character password won't be in anyone's dictionary.”


2. Use a different password for all sites – even for the ones where privacy isn’t an
issue. To help remember the passwords, again, following Bruce Schneier’s advice is
recommended: “If you can't remember your passwords, write them down and put
the paper in your wallet. But just write the sentence – or better yet – a hint that
will help you remember your sentence.”

3. Never trust a 3rd party with your important passwords (webmail, banking,
medical etc.). If you can’t remember them all, write them down and keep them in your wallet.

Administrators:


1. Enforce strong password policy – if you give the users a choice, it is very likely that
they would choose weak passwords.

2. Make sure passwords are not transmitted in clear text. Always use HTTPS on login.
3. Make sure passwords are not kept in clear text. Always digest password before
storing to DB.


4. Employ aggressive anti-brute force mechanisms to detect and mitigate brute
force attacks on login credentials. Make these attacks too slowly for any practical
purposes even for shorter passwords. You should actively put obstacles in the way
of a brute-force attacker – such as CAPTCHAs, computational challenges, etc.


5. Employ a password change policy. Trigger the policy either by time or when
suspicion for a compromise arises.


6. Allow and encourage passphrases instead of passwords. Although sentences may
be longer, they may be easier to remember. With added characters, they become
more difficult to break.

Passwords should be simple enough that they won't be too easily
forgotten, but the idea is to make cracking the code virtually
impossible for either an unknown or known hacker.

115,497 views 53 replies
Reply #26 Top

I have three separate pwds at work that expire monthly. I used to just add sequential numbers, get to the end (guess you'd call that weak) and start all over but now no reusable pswds so it's become a pain in the a**. <_<

Reply #27 Top

I use a password manager, my passwords are randomly generated, the master password is entered using a virtual keyboard. A backup is stored as a encrypted file on my USB drive.

|-)

Reply #28 Top

Quoting Skinhit, reply 21
Mine is a combination of Po's real name, his mom's maiden name, his blood type and his first pets name...
End of Skinhit's quote

His is "ihateskinhit".

Strange combination of letters...can't figure that boy out.

Reply #29 Top

password manager
End of quote

Good idea...just put one on my phone. It has a pswd generator too so maybe that'll help...until I forget my phone...and pswds... ;P

Reply #30 Top

I'm acquainted with a gentleman who makes his living consulting nationally & internationally on computer security issues.  He advocates having 2 strong passwords, one for financial transactions and one for everything else, and that is his personal practice.  He also believes forcing employees to change passwords every 90 days, a common practice, is counterproductive and less secure than leaving them alone.  One man's opinion.  YMMV.

Reply #31 Top

Most of those make sense to me but I was surprised at "rockyou" being so high on the list. I wonder why that is so popular.

Reply #32 Top

Hm. I use a strong one for financial things, but a fairly weak one for everything else (because really, if somebody wants to impersonate me and post on a forum as me, I can just email the admin and nothing of value is lost).

I haven't heard about the 90 day changes being a security risk before.

Reply #33 Top

I'm not sure he would consider requiring periodic PW changes (90 day or otherwise) to be a security risk per se, though he argues that doing so almost guarantees, at least certainly invites, insecure behavior such as writing them down and keeping them in insecure places, but he definitely feels doing so is a needless waste of otherwise productive time.  And a source of immense frustration for people needing legitimate access, especially to multiple systems & subsystems on a routine basis.

Reply #34 Top

The periodic change thing makes for a lot of unnecessary angst and, quite frankly, not sure I buy into it.

If you have one strong pw >8 letters with upper and lower case, numbers and other doodads/wingdings ... ah well. Why not have two.

My other one is Zubaz. The way he types it.

As for the CAPTCHA text?

I used to think they were talking about J. D. Salinger's book. You know...

"The CAPTCHA in the Rye".

Reply #35 Top

Top 10 Passwords You Should Never Use!
End of quote

 

well yeh now that you went and posted them for everyone to see.. ;P

wanders off to change his abc passwrod..

Reply #36 Top

How about "iwannastealallyourpizza", HG?

Reply #37 Top

You can use this one too. Fashizzleitupyourbutt lol

EDIT: To avoid misunderstanding the above is not directed at anyone. Its just a bunch of words, nothing more. Please don't read anything else into it.

Reply #38 Top

Quoting Daiwa, reply 30
I'm acquainted with a gentleman who makes his living consulting nationally & internationally on computer security issues.  He advocates having 2 strong passwords, one for financial transactions and one for everything else, and that is his personal practice.  He also believes forcing employees to change passwords every 90 days, a common practice, is counterproductive and less secure than leaving them alone.  One man's opinion.  YMMV.
End of Daiwa's quote

Daiwa, that is a man after my own heart!  I use to work at a place where the security folks would require changing the password every 30 days!  Needless to say, what was actually happening was that over 75% of the users had their password written somewhere around their desk.

I actually do follow his advice - kind of.  I have a couple of very strong ones for sensitive sites, and then a couple of strong ones for throw away sites (a throw away site is a news paper, or other site that requires login that does not store any financial information of mine).  Each password is picked from 1 of 2 themes - so you have to guess both themes to get the passwords.

I do favor changing passwords periodically.  But the more often you force them, the less likely someone is to remember them and the less secure they are.120-180 days seems good.  Even a 30 day weak password is going to be hacked in time.  But most sites will lock out an account after several wrong entries, and then you have to know either your secret questions, or click on a link in an email sent to your account (so email is one of the strong passwords since it has the "keys to the kingdom" for most of the rest of your password sites.)

Reply #39 Top

I use to work at a place where the security folks would require changing the password every 30 days!
End of quote

Probably to show the higher ups they're doing something.

 

I do favor changing passwords periodically. But the more often you force them, the less likely someone is to remember them and the less secure they are.120-180 days seems good. Even a 30 day weak password is going to be hacked in time. But most sites will lock out an account after several wrong entries, and then you have to know either your secret questions, or click on a link in an email sent to your account (so email is one of the strong passwords since it has the "keys to the kingdom" for most of the rest of your password sites.)
End of quote

Actually, if you don't use one of the other schemes or pw keepers/safes, that doesn't sound too bad.

Reply #40 Top

Quoting DrJBHL, reply 36
How about "iwannastealallyourpizza", HG?
End of DrJBHL's quote

 

LOL thats the first one people would try that know me.

 

Reply #41 Top

my password for everything is 1234.

Reply #42 Top

oh crap.

Reply #44 Top

I use an Olfactometer to recognize my scent :P  

Reply #45 Top

Really? On the net? You must have a rather....uniquely strong one. 8|

Reply #46 Top

Quoting HG_Eliminator, reply 40

Quoting DrJBHL, reply 36How about "iwannastealallyourpizza", HG?
 

LOL thats the first one people would try that know me.

 
End of HG_Eliminator's quote

 

See? anyone needing HG_Eliminator? Just mention Pizza and he could be at the Galactic Boundary on the Enterprise and he'd be here asap.

Reply #47 Top

Roboform. Been using it for years. The SafeNotes feature makes password lookups for non-browser based apps very handy too. But of course, you have to be logged in to the PC to use it.

 

Reply #48 Top

Quoting RPGFX, reply 41
my password for everything is 1234.
End of RPGFX's quote

 

Haha, one time I was trying to get my school records online and I guess I had made a password but forgot it, so I had to call the school and ask this woman who worked there what my password was and she looked it up and started laughing and said "It's 1234, I bet you feel stupid" and I just said "uh...thanks". 

Reply #49 Top

Quoting Phoon, reply 47
Roboform. Been using it for years. The SafeNotes feature makes password lookups for non-browser based apps very handy too. But of course, you have to be logged in to the PC to use it.

 
End of Phoon's quote

Sounds good to me, Phoon.... you never know, though how secure things are until disaster strikes, and then it's too late.

Reply #50 Top

My password is ******

No-one ever guesses that :)