If you see your password below, STOP!
Do not finish reading this post and immediately go change
your password -- before you forget. You will probably make changes in
several places since passwords tend to be reused for multiple accounts.
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Here are two lists, the first compiled by SplashData :
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1. password
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2. 123456
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3.12345678
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4. qwerty
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5.abc123
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6. monkey
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7. 1234567
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8. letmein
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9. trustno1
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10. dragon
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11. baseball
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12. 111111
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13.iloveyou
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14. master
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15. sunshine
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16. ashley
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17. bailey
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18. passw0rd
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19. shadow
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20. 123123
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21. 654321
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22. superman
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23. qazwsx
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24. michael
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25. football
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Last year, Imperva looked at 32 million passwords stolen from RockYou, a hacked website, and released its own Top 10 "worst" list:
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1. 123456
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2. 12345
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3. 123456789
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4. Password
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5. iloveyou
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6. princess
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7. rockyou
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8. 1234567
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9. 12345678
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10. abc123
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If you've gotten this far and don't see any of your
passwords, that's good news. But, note that complex passwords combining
letters and numbers, such as passw0rd (with the "o" replaced by a zero)
are starting to get onto the 2011 list. abc123 is a mixed password that
showed up on both lists.
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Last year, Imperva provided a list of password best
practices, created by NASA to help its users protect their rocket
science, they include:
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It should contain at least eight characters
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It should contain a mix of four different types of
characters - upper case letters, lower case letters, numbers, and special
characters such as !@#$%^&*,;" If there is only one letter or
special character, it should not be either the first or last character
in the password.
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It should not be a name, a slang word, or any word in the
dictionary. It should not include any part of your name or your e-mail
address.
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Following that advice, of course, means you'll create a
password that will be impossible, unless you try a trick credited to
security guru Bruce Schneir: Turn a sentence into a password.
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For example, "Now I lay me down to sleep" might become
nilmDOWN2s, a 10-character password that won't be found in any
dictionary.
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Can't remember that password? Then it's OK to
write it down and put it in your wallet, or better yet keep a hint in
your wallet. Just don't also include a list of the sites and services
that password works with. Try to use a different password on every
service, but if you can't do that, at least develop a set of passwords
that you use at different sites.
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