How to Create a Strong Password. The U. S. government recently revamped its password recommendations, abandoning its endorsement of picking a favorite phrase and replacing a couple characters with symbols, like c. R. These short, hard- to- read passwords look complicated to humans but very very simple to computers. Instead, you want long, weird strings that neither computers nor people can guess. Humans are bad at coming up with these—we all pick the same “random” words, and we’re bad at remembering actually random strings. Follow this guide to make good passwords, or better yet, let an app make and remember them for you. Make your passwords very long. Your enemy isn’t some guy in a ski mask trying to guess your password one try at a time. It’s a program that automatically runs through massive databases of common passwords or random combinations of characters. The best answer to that is a very long string of words. As the webcomic xkcd famously pointed out, a bunch of plain words is pretty good. But as many hackers use “dictionary attacks” to guess regular words, it’s best to add some capital letters, special characters, or numbers. Don’t use a common phrase. But don’t use the same bunch of plain words as everyone else. President Trump loves Twitter. It’s a direct stream-of-consciousness rant about whatever pops into his mind (or onto cable TV) at any given second. But here at.![]() If your password consisted of the entire script of Hamlet, it would still be unsafe if everyone else had the same password. When in the course of human events” is a shitty password. So is a famous movie line, or a Bible verse, or even an acronym of a Bible verse. As we’ve established time and again, your clever tricks aren’t protecting your password. If you or…Read more And don’t get clever with thematic or personally meaningful passwords. Sometimes humans do try to crack passwords, so don’t help them out by using your son’s birthday or the phrase printed on your favorite coffee mug. Test your password. If you use a password manager, it’ll test your password in real time, on the safety of your computer. ![]() No need to swing a leg over the new Kymco Spade—just go ahead and walk up from behind and plop down on the 28-inch seat. Crank up the engine, twist the throttle. If you need to get your bearings, the squished brain looking stuff is a squished brain. The black horror is an arachnoid cyst. Internist Jennifer De Longpre at Metro. The sites How Secure Is My Password?, How Big Is Your Password?, and How Strong Is Your Password? But they won’t warn you about common guessable phrases, like those Bible verses. Of course, typing your passwords into unfamiliar sites is a bad habit. These sites are safe, as they’re all publicly run by trusted developers who promise that your entered text never leaves your computer. Still, to be safe, just use these sites to get the gist before you make your real password. Don’t reuse your password. When your password on some web service gets hacked (and it will), you’d better hope you didn’t use the same password on three other services. Don’t use a weak password for services that “don’t matter,” because some day you might give one of those services your credit card info, or use it to authorize more important services, and you won’t think to beef up your password. ![]() Yahoo has confirmed that information from at least 5. Read more Use a password manager. Until you do this, no matter how hard you try all the rules above, you will keep picking bad passwords. Here’s how: Your “random” string of words will be something like “monkey dragon baseball princess,” four extremely common password words, and a computer will guess it. You’ll pick something memorable, which will limit your options, and a computer will guess it. You’ll manage to make a password a computer can’t guess, and you’ll forget it, and you’ll have to replace it with a weaker password, and a computer will guess it. You’ll pick something identifiable to anyone who follows you on Twitter or Facebook—like your dog’s name—and a human will guess it. Internet standards expert, CEO of web company i. Fusion Labs, and blogger John Pozadzides knows a…Read more Instead, get your computer to make and remember your passwords for you. This is the only reliable but convenient way to manage the vast quantity of passwords that modern life requires. The current best in class is 1. Password. If you don’t care about the detailed differences between managers, just grab this one and follow Lifehacker’s setup guide. Using a password manager is basically internet security 1. Read more There are several other fantastic, full- featured password managers for Windows and OS X, beloved by Lifehacker staff and readers. All these apps will create and remember your passwords. And all of them tell you how secure each of your passwords are. Some even alert you when the services you use get hacked, whether or not you were personally exposed. You have a ton of options for password managers, but when it comes to your security, you want the…Read more Of these top picks, the most distinctive is the open- source Kee. Pass. It focuses on local storage rather than cloud solutions, and it even lets you use a file to unlock it, so you could turn a physical thumb drive into your “password.”Cloud- based services like 1. Password and Last. Pass are more vulnerable to remote attacks. But because they heavily encrypt your data and don’t store your master password, you’re still safe even if those services are hacked—as long as your master password is too hard to crack. You can also sync your encrypted password file with Dropbox or Google Drive; a hacker would still need your master password to unlock it.)You know you’re supposed to use a password manager. In fact, you’ve been meaning to set one up for…Read more You just need to remember one password: The one that locks your password manager. Follow all the rules above to create a strong master password, especially if you sync your data. Otherwise, if your password service ever gets hacked, the hackers will also guess your weak master password, and they will swim around in all your accounts as in a silo of Scrooge Mc. Duck money. Now if you just have to write that master password down, do it on paper, and keep it somewhere safe like your wallet. Don’t write “MASTER PASSWORD” on it. Rip it up as soon as you’ve memorized it (which will take just a day or two, thanks to the muscle memory of typing it in every time you log into anything). Don’t forget your master password, or you could be completely and utterly screwed. Using a password manager is smart security. That’s nothing new. However, the best password managers …Read more Don’t store passwords in your browser. Those can get hacked, too. Some of Opera’s saved passwords were partially hacked last year. Even Google accounts are vulnerable. A hacker doesn’t have to defeat Google’s security—they just have to trick you, and it’s a lot easier for hackers to pose as Google and request your login than it is for them to pretend to be your chosen password management app. If your Google account gets hacked, you’ll be in enough trouble without also worrying about all your saved passwords. Follow the rules every time. Of course, your bank, your doctor’s portal, and your library are still following the outdated security recommendations, so they’ll still force you to follow weirdly specific rules for password creation, like making you start with a letter or include one symbol. Ironically, by lowering the number of possible passwords, these rules make them easier to crack.)First generate a random, secure password with your password manager. Then amend that password as minimally as possible to comply with the service’s specific rules. Do your password editing inside your password manager, so it can alert you if you’re turning a strong password into a weak one. We’ve covered how to create a memorable password if you absolutely have to. But since all our recommended password managers offer mobile apps (Kee. Pass recommends certain third- party mobile ports), you can save your password anywhere you go. There’s just no reason to make up your own password. Use two- factor authentication. While it isn’t foolproof, two- factor provides a layer of security for only a minimal loss of convenience. But not all two- factor is equally secure. Dedicated authentication apps are a lot safer than just getting a code over SMS. But both are safer than a password alone. Two- factor authentication is one of the most important ways to protect your accounts. However,…Read more Don’t ruin all this by using security questions. Security questions? More like insecurity questions! I’m fun at parties. Point is, the concept of security questions made some sense when they were used in 1. Google up your mother’s maiden name, where you went to high school, or your favorite ice cream flavor, then call Amazon tech support and pose as you. Something Weird Is Happening With President Trump's Twitter. President Trump loves Twitter. It’s a direct stream- of- consciousness rant about whatever pops into his mind (or onto cable TV) at any given second. But here at Gizmodo we can’t help but notice that something is a little different this week. The president’s Twitter feed has become, dare we say, restrained? Yes, “restrained” is all relative, and there’s always the danger of saying that Donald Trump is “pivoting” at the precise moment that he shows us he’s the same man he always was. But there’s a noticeable change in his tweets from the past few days. Just take a look at his tweets from this morning: Notice anything strange? Yes, Trump is still tweeting out things in a bombastic manner that would be considered ridiculous by normal presidential standards. But if you look at his most recent tweets, there is a lot less attacking of his “enemies” and a lot more emphasis on what he sees as positive developments. And it’s been happening all week. Lately, President Trump has been tweeting about job growth and the stock market, even if he’s taking credit for things that he may regret later. Stock markets have a way of correcting themselves, and you know he won’t want to take credit for the inevitable downturn.) But there’s still much more positivity than there is negativity: Granted, there have been a few “attacks,” even against his own party, but they’ve been in the minority this week. Compare that with President Trump’s Twitter rants from as recent as July 2. Saturday and Sunday) where he went on unhinged, and far more typical, diatribes about witch hunts, fake news, “foolish past leaders,” and sprinkled his words liberally with exclamation points. On Saturday alone he sent thirteen tweets in his more usual style: Or just take a look at the week before when he was railing against his own Attorney General Jeff Sessions. One theory for this shift would be the appointment of John Kelly as his Chief of Staff. Kelly is reportedly watching Trump like a hawk: It’s unlikely that Kelly is there for Trump’s early morning tweets, but perhaps someone explained to Trump that it makes a lot more sense to emphasize what you view as the positive things happening in the country rather than the negative. It’s Media Relations 1. US right now. Like I said, it’s entirely possible that we’re calling this one way too early. And obviously Trump’s core values (those of bigotry and racism) haven’t changed. But he might be wising up from a purely aesthetic point of view, at least on Twitter. And for those who oppose the president’s discriminatory agenda, that’s actually somewhat terrifying. If the president starts to hide his terrible agenda behind a veneer of pearly white smiles (take a look at that photo above) then he might actually get some things done with Congress. As a reminder, those things include massive tax cuts for the rich, deporting non- criminal undocumented immigrants, and stripping health care from millions of Americans. Chilling, to say the least.
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