No sane person would ever like someone else reading her email. Or for that matter some other person using her password and breaking into a financial institution. You should, therefore, choose a strong, secure password in such a manner that would be a hard nut to crack for others and easy for you to remember. The more random and mixed-up you make it, the harder it is for others to crack. Mind you, if your password is compromised, the password crackers will even take over your identity.
A password, if too short, is vulnerable to attack if an attacker gets hold of the cryptographic hash of the password. Present-day computers are fast enough to try all alphabetic passwords shorter than seven characters. We can call a password weak if it is short or is a default, or which can be rapidly guessed by searching a subset of all possible passwords such as words in the dictionary, proper names, words based on the user name or common variations on these themes.
On the other hand, a strong password would be sufficiently long, random, or which can be produced only by the user who chose it, so that ‘guessing’ for it will require too long a time.
For maximum security, the user should follow some simple guidelines:
- Passwords should preferably be at least 8 characters long and not more than 14.
- Passwords should contain a mix of numbers, letters, and special characters (MyChoice75@$).
- Passwords should not contain a dictionary word from any dictionary, be it French, Spanish, medical, etc.
- Each password should be different from the user’s User-ID and any permutation of that User-ID.
- New passwords and old passwords should differ by at least 3 characters.
- Avoid picking names or nicknames of people, pets, or places, or personal information that can be easily found out, such as your birthday, address etc.
- It’s wise to stay away from common keyboard sequences, such as dfgh678 or abc345 .
- Never form a password by appending a digit to a word. That can be easily guessed.
- Avoid writing your password down or storing it on your computer.
- Never share your password with anyone else.
Top Image Credits: Ergo Notes
Bottom Image Credits: Peak Internet
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