At a time when password breaches like the one at LinkedIn are once more making the news, there's plenty of good advice around about how to select a strong password as opposed to the sort of stereotyped easy-to-remember-but-stupendously-easy-to-guess password that turns up again and again in dumped lists of hacked passwords.
So if your favorite, much-used password (or something very like it) is in the following list, it might be a good idea to stop reading this now, go to the link on how to select a strong password and use it as a basis for changing all your passwords to something safer (then come back and think about the PINs you use). The list is abstracted from one compiled by Mark Burnett, representing the most-used passwords in a data set of around 6 million:
- password
- 123456
- 12345678
- 1234
- qwerty
- 12345
- dragon
- pussy
- baseball
- football
- letmein
- monkey
- 696969
- abc123
- mustang
- michael
- shadow
- master
- jennifer
- 111111
- 2000
- jordan
- superman
- harley
- 1234567
However, it's worth remembering that even the humble all-digit PIN (Personal Identification Number) has its issues with selecting a string of digits that isn't too easy to guess. Think about the number of times you might use a short PIN (four or even three digits) in your daily life:
- ATM/Cashpoint keypad
- Chip & PIN Scanner
- Digital locks with keypads
- Handheld authentication devices like an RSA or Digipass token, or a software implementation on a mobile device: authentication via laptops, netbooks tablets and smartphones
- 1234
- 0000
- 2580
- 1111
- 5555
- 5683
- 0852
- 2222
- 1212
- 1998
- 6969
- 1379
- 1997
- 2468
- 9999
- 7777
- 1996
- 2011
- 3333
- 1999
- 8888
- 1995
- 2525
- 1590
- 1235
Photo Credit: Pauline Breijer/Shutterstock
David Harley BA CITP FBCS CISSP is an English IT security researcher, author/editor and consultant known for his prolific blogs and articles and his books on and research into topics like malware, Mac security, anti-malware product testing and management of email abuse. He works closely with ESET, where, since 2011, he has held the position of Senior Research Fellow.
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