The article 鈥淓stimating Password-Cracking Times鈥 by the business software solutions company Better Buys asserts that a seasoned hacker could break the woefully inadequate yet commonly-used password 鈥123456鈥 in less than 0.29 milliseconds.
Now, it may be difficult to imagine anyone in today鈥檚 virtual world relying on 鈥123456鈥 to secure their data and personal information. But, In fact, for the better part of the new millennium, according to UMUC Cyber Connections Blog contributor Garrett Boyd, 鈥123456鈥 has remained鈥攁long with password, 12345678, qwerty and 12345鈥攁mong the top five on the list of the 25 most commonly used and hackable passwords.
Boyd, a cybersecurity student and part of UMUC鈥檚 award-winning Cyber Padawans, has been working for nearly a decade in IT and cybersecurity in the United States Marine Corps. He recently posted 鈥淔ive Tips to Make Password Management Easier,鈥 offering solid ideas on creating complex and obscure passwords鈥攐nes that are hard for others to guess鈥攖o help strengthen your online security protocol, which should include using a different password for each discreet login and changing your passwords often.
But crafting hack-defying passwords, he said, is only as good as your ability to remember them. That鈥檚 a tall task, according to a 2016 Intel Security survey of more than 2,000 English-speaking adults, which indicated that between email, social media accounts, banking, utilities, productivity tools and online shopping the average person has 27 discreet logins.
See 鈥淔ive Tips to Make Password Management Easier鈥 for suggestions and links to useful cybersecurity resources, including the complete list of the world's 25 worst passwords and the Better Buys no-cost tool that lets you test how long it will take a computer to crack your password!
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