blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Technology News

 

Favourite passwords: "1234" and "password"
Posted: 12 February 2009 1159 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 


WASHINGTON - Better think twice before choosing a password for emails, online bank accounts and airline tickets.

Passwords that show no imagination or distinctiveness are easy prey for information pirates, a new US study says.

A statistical analysis of 28,000 passwords recently stolen from a popular US website and posted on the Internet reveals that people often do the easy thing.

It found that 16 per cent took a first name as a password, often their own or one of their children, according to the study published by Information Week.

Another 14 per cent relied on the easiest keyboard combinations to remember such as "1234" or "12345678." For those using English keyboards, "QWERTY", was popular. Likewise, "AZERTY" scored with people with European keyboards.

Five per cent of the stolen passwords were names of television shows or stars popular with young people like "hannah," inspired by singer Hannah Montana. "Pokemon," "Matrix," and "Ironman" were others.

The word "password," or easy to guess variations like "password1," accounted for four per cent.

Three per cent of the passwords expressed attitudes like "I don't care," "Whatever," "Yes" or "No."

There were sentimental choices - "Iloveyou" - and their opposite - "Ihateyou."

Robert Graham, of the company Errata Security, which did the analysis and published the conclusions, advises that to better protect against cyber intrusions: "choose a password that is longer than eight characters with one capital letter and one symbol." - AFP/ar

 


Other technology News
Privacy group sues to stop Google policy change
Windows 8 preview set for February 29
Amazon tests e-commerce waters in India
Nokia cuts 4,000 jobs in struggle to win smartphone market
Beijing issues ultimatum for microblog users
Apple's iPhone hot but Android handsets on fire
Outrage over Steve Jobs angel in Taiwan ad
Faceless despite Facebook is still the choice for many
Facebook seeks to raise US$5b in IPO
Silicon Valley braces for Facebook millionaires
African tablet to rival iPad?
Thailand welcomes Twitter censorship tool
Twitter faces censorship charges, blackout call
Symantec urges users to disable pcAnywhere
EU takes on Internet giants over people's personal data

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions