Found this [url="http://www.tomshardware.com/news/imperva-rockyou-most-common-passwords,9486.html"]article[/url] while browsing around at Tom's Hardware:
Is your password "123456"?
Last year, a major security breach at RockYou.com resulted in the release of 32 million passwords. With such a large data set available, security firm Imperva Application Defense Center (ADC) analyzed and found that, when given the chance, most users will choose a simplistic password.
Imperva found that nearly a third of users chose passwords whose length is equal or below six characters and almost 60 percent of users chose their passwords from a limited set of alpha-numeric characters. Almost half of users used names, slang words, dictionary words or trivial passwords (consecutive digits, adjacent keyboard keys, and so on), with the most common password being "123456".
Scroll a bit more and you'll see a chart from 1-20 listing the passwords these people use. Kind of makes me laugh when I saw them. :laugh:
Your Top 20 most common passwords
Your Top 20 most common passwords
''They say truth is the first casualty of war. But who defines what's true? Truth is just a matter of perspective. The duty of every soldier is to protect the innocent, and sometimes that means preserving the lie of good and evil, that war isn't just natural selection played out on a grand scale. The only truth I found is that the world we live in is a giant tinderbox. All it takes...is someone to light the match" - Captain Price
Shoot, yet another top twenty list that I don't get onto, booo.
When I was an IT manager, convincing people to use obscure passwords was always a top priority, but getting them not to write it down and 'hide' it some where they thought was obscure, like underneath the keyboard(!!!!), now that was almost mission impossible.
When I was an IT manager, convincing people to use obscure passwords was always a top priority, but getting them not to write it down and 'hide' it some where they thought was obscure, like underneath the keyboard(!!!!), now that was almost mission impossible.
[QUOTE=Darth Gavinius;1096098]Distrbution of games, is becoming a little like Democracy (all about money and control) - in the end choice is an illusion and you have to choose your lesser evil.
And everything is hidden in the fine print.[/QUOTE]
And everything is hidden in the fine print.[/QUOTE]
- dragon wench
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I think it's because passwords can be so difficult to remember, so people risk having their security breached by choosing something simple.
When I pick passwords I go for things that are meaningful to me, but wouldn't be to others, or at least, are relatively obscure. That way, I'm less likely to forget my password, but it won't be obvious to anyone attempting to pry.
When I pick passwords I go for things that are meaningful to me, but wouldn't be to others, or at least, are relatively obscure. That way, I'm less likely to forget my password, but it won't be obvious to anyone attempting to pry.
Spoiler
testingtest12
Spoiler
testingtest12
The problem isn't as much that a (single) password is "difficult" to remember ... the problem is that there are so many places you must remember password(s), leading to either reuse (bad) or easy (bad) passwords.dragon wench wrote:I think it's because passwords can be so difficult to remember, so people risk having their security breached by choosing something simple.
When I pick passwords I go for things that are meaningful to me, but wouldn't be to others, or at least, are relatively obscure. That way, I'm less likely to forget my password, but it won't be obvious to anyone attempting to pry.
I do this myself, despite I very well know the issue first hand. I think I have about 6 or so passwords I reuse all over the web - although they are all "strong" passwords, it is a bad practice to reuse them so heavily, but otherwise I simply can't remember them and have to write them down (bad)
For trivia sake, the longest password I use currently is 14 characters long, which is for my home bank
Insert signature here.
- Crenshinibon
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But a password only is only a small bump when you count the user's habits, such as not locking their computer when going to the bathroom or not protecting their computer. I believe that social engineering still remains to be one of the leading causes in passwords, codes or numbers being discovered.
While users may not like it, I do think that it's a great practice to have randomly generated daily passwords, after all, wiping one and resetting it is incredibly easy and can be done in about a minute - if their computer is accessible that is.
While users may not like it, I do think that it's a great practice to have randomly generated daily passwords, after all, wiping one and resetting it is incredibly easy and can be done in about a minute - if their computer is accessible that is.
“The world breaks every one and afterward many are strong at the broken places. But those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially.”
- Vicsun
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In fairness, Rockyou seems like a service that, if compromised, would have minor repercussions. I have registered to a ton of sites using fake information and a password of the minimum allowable length consisting of a single repeating character. If somebody compromises the account I use to view youtube videos that require age verification, well, good for them I guess.
edit: I consider that better security practice than using the same password for http://www.picturesofkittens.com and my email account. Most websites don't use any sort of encryption when transmitting passwords, and a frightening number of sites store passwords in plain text on their servers. Every time I request my password from some site, and it just gets emailed to me unencrypted, the paranoiac in me shivers. Anybody serious about password security should be using something like 1Password for OS X, or KeePass for Windows, along with 20+ character alphanumeric strings. I've found out that using acronyms of quotes, with spaces replaced by a non-alphanumeric character, makes for long, easy to remember passwords. The title of this thread can easily become Y;T;20;mc;p which is as fine a password as any.
edit: I consider that better security practice than using the same password for http://www.picturesofkittens.com and my email account. Most websites don't use any sort of encryption when transmitting passwords, and a frightening number of sites store passwords in plain text on their servers. Every time I request my password from some site, and it just gets emailed to me unencrypted, the paranoiac in me shivers. Anybody serious about password security should be using something like 1Password for OS X, or KeePass for Windows, along with 20+ character alphanumeric strings. I've found out that using acronyms of quotes, with spaces replaced by a non-alphanumeric character, makes for long, easy to remember passwords. The title of this thread can easily become Y;T;20;mc;p which is as fine a password as any.
Vicsun, I certainly agree with your assertion that you are an unpleasant person. ~Chanak
- Fljotsdale
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I'm another that ain't in the top 20.
But I do reuse passwords.
But I do reuse passwords.
Leonard Cohen :http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8VwvO0e ... re=related
time for a change
"Dogs come when they're called. Cats take a message and get back to you."
time for a change
"Dogs come when they're called. Cats take a message and get back to you."
- Vicsun
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Honestly, everyone reuses passwords. Human brains aren't equipped well for remembering loads of passwords. The trick is to figure out passwords are important and which ones aren't. Using your online banking password on a site like the aforementioned rockyou.com is bad. Using the rockyou.com password for youtube isn't. Using a long, complex password for youtube is a waste of memory and keystrokes.Fljotsdale wrote: But I do reuse passwords.
Vicsun, I certainly agree with your assertion that you are an unpleasant person. ~Chanak
- NarutoAngel221
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