75% Use Same Password For Social Media & Email
wiredmikey writes "Over 250,000 user names, email addresses, and passwords used for social networking sites can easily be found online. A study of the data collected showed that 75 percent of social networking username and password samples collected online were identical to those used for email accounts. The password data was gathered from blogs, torrents, online collaboration services and other sources. It was found that 43 percent of the data was leaked from online collaboration tools while 21 percent of data was leaked from blog postings. Meanwhile, torrents and users of other social hubs were responsible for leaking 10 percent and 18 percent of user data respectively...."
My password is IAMGAY. That way, even if it got found out I can be confident no one will want to use it, because that would mean they are gay.
Use firefox extension's password hasher (http://wijjo.com/PasswordHasher). Then you only need to remember one password but can use it for a variety of sites. If any one site's passwords get leaked, you dont have to go around an update your password for all other sites.
While I was studying Info. Sec. at my univ, my professor at the time told the class about this research they had about passwords. They were going around gathering statistics by asking random people questions about their passwords- length, number of special characters, if they used the same passwords, the number of times they changed them and so on. He said what amazed him was that one in every 5-6 people would just tell them their password and ask is that good enough?
Shame this isn't ten years ago. You coulda got some VC funding for that idea.
Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
When it comes to passwords, this dilbert comic comes to mind- http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2007-01-17/
Hah, my worst enemy is a system where a password has to have:
- at least two uppercase letters
- at least two lowercase letters
- at least two numbers
- at least two symbols
- at least 12 characters
- no characters that repeat
- nothing that's in your personal records
- nothing from the dictionary that's over three characters
- nothing from a FOREIGN dictionary that's over three characters
- at least three characters different from your last 10 passwords
No joke, I used a system for years that had those exact password requirements. Worse yet, I had to SUPPORT this system. Sometimes it would take a half hour for me to help someone figure out a new password.
There is a danger in creating a password system with two many requirements, because I know very few people who used that system who didn't have their password on a sticky note on their monitor.
Help me fix my brother's injured butt!
Facebook's founder knows the importance of social media:
So in this case, the victims didn't even have the same password, but accidentally used the email password for Facebook. Combined with a malicious site (which Facebook was for them) this can lead to leaked passwords.
The best solution to this is to use a password manager like 1password, roboform or KeepassX. I find 1password useful because it matches my password with the domain, preventing inadvertent entries. It's also a boon if you are developing with dozens of test and staging sites which change passwords often.
Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
It's pretty amazing just how much of the world is based on trust isn't it?
And it's equally tragic that it can't.
I don't think it's so much that people automatically trust each other, although that's certainly the case sometimes, it's more like it never occurs to too many people, unfortunately, that what they divulge could cause problems in the wrong hands.
For many years now, when someone asks me for information, my first thought is not to give the information, but to consider why I don't want to give it to that person. And I don't consider myself particularly paranoid with respect to what I share.
It gets tiring after awhile. Modern life in the 21st century requires a level of vigilance regarding information that probably never existed outside of the military, national security apparatus, law enforcement or some elements of business before a couple decades ago.
"Loose lips sink ships" was a common saying during World War II, but nowadays everyone must practice that level of vigilance over their own information all the time merely to be safe from criminals.
You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.