Heard about any good hacks lately?
It’s high time we went over some password rules:
1. The longer the better. Six characters? No. Eight? Meh. Twelve? Yes.
2. Use a combination of uppercase, lowercase, numbers and symbols.
3. Create a different password for each site. It’s a total pain, I know, but consider one of the following methods:
Luigi Montanez’s “password recipe” for websites
– Take the number of letters in the site name, times the number of letters in the part after the dot. Google.com = 6 x 3, for instance.
– Choose a phrase you can remember—like “All’s well that ends well”—and grab the first letter of each word in that phrase: awtew.
– Take the site name, strip out the vowels, then capitalize: GGL.
– Use the number of letters after the dot again: 3.
Final password: 18awtewGGL3.
Yahoo.com would be: 15awtewYH2, for instance.
or…
Incorporate cryptic language from a device you always have with you
As an example, use your cell phone’s serial number, then add a symbol like an exclamation point, then add the site’s name onto the end—capitalized but minus the vowels.
If I use the model number of my phone’s battery, for instance, which is easily found by removing the back plate, I get gb/t18287. So my Best Buy password would be gb/t18287!BSTBY—pretty strong, huh?
The best part is that since you change phones every so often, it’d force you to change your password as well. The bad part is that if someone gets ahold of one of these passwords, it’s not impossible to figure out the pattern. Also, don’t lose your phone.
Password management services
You can also use password management services like 1Password or LastPass. That may be the path of least resistance, although some of these services are susceptible to security issues themselves.
More Techland password tips:
Who ARE These People? Sony Hack Reveals ‘Seinfeld’ as Most Popular Password
Passwords: How To Stop Ignoring The Expert Advice
Why You Should Make Your Passwords Harder To Crack
Want more of these videos? Click here…
Heard about any good hacks lately?
It’s high time we went over some password rules:
1. The longer the better. Six characters? No. Eight? Meh. Twelve? Yes.
2. Use a combination of uppercase, lowercase, numbers and symbols.
3. Create a different password for each site. It’s a total pain, I know, but consider one of the following methods:
Luigi Montanez’s “password recipe” for websites
– Take the number of letters in the site name, times the number of letters in the part after the dot. Google.com = 6 x 3, for instance.
– Choose a phrase you can remember—like “All’s well that ends well”—and grab the first letter of each word in that phrase: awtew.
– Take the site name, strip out the vowels, then capitalize: GGL.
– Use the number of letters after the dot again: 3.
Final password: 18awtewGGL3.
Yahoo.com would be: 15awtewYH2, for instance.
or…
Incorporate cryptic language from a device you always have with you
As an example, use your cell phone’s serial number, then add a symbol like an exclamation point, then add the site’s name onto the end—capitalized but minus the vowels.
If I use the model number of my phone’s battery, for instance, which is easily found by removing the back plate, I get gb/t18287. So my Best Buy password would be gb/t18287!BSTBY—pretty strong, huh?
The best part is that since you change phones every so often, it’d force you to change your password as well. The bad part is that if someone gets ahold of one of these passwords, it’s not impossible to figure out the pattern. Also, don’t lose your phone.
Password management services
You can also use password management services like 1Password or LastPass. That may be the path of least resistance, although some of these services are susceptible to security issues themselves.
More Techland password tips:
Who ARE These People? Sony Hack Reveals ‘Seinfeld’ as Most Popular Password
Passwords: How To Stop Ignoring The Expert Advice
Why You Should Make Your Passwords Harder To Crack
Want more of these videos? Click here…