Webinar: Why You Need A Password Manager

Discover everything you need to know about passwords (and why you should use LastPass) at our upcoming webinar on Sept. 27, 2022.

Password management is a big part of cybersecurity—without password best practices, you can’t be sure your logins are properly protected.

Find out everything you don’t know about password management at our upcoming webinar:

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

Why Is Password Management Important?

Although passwords are the most direct way to access a user’s private information, most passwords in use today are not considered strong or complex enough—and even if they are, they aren’t updated often enough.

90% of users have 50 or more online accounts, many of which rely on weak and shared passwords.

Different sites, apps, and programs have different requirements for what your password needs to have—minimum character length, capitalization, numbers, and symbols being the most common.

The idea here being the more complex a password is, the harder it is for a hacker to crack it. This can be difficult to maintain—but it’s vitally important that you manage it…

Passwords protect email accounts, banking information, private documents, administrator rights, and more—and yet, users continue to make critical errors when choosing, protecting, and managing their passwords.

Password Security Is Notoriously Weak

Outdated and repeated passwords are one of the easiest ways for cybercriminals to penetrate your systems and steal your data. Are your old passwords putting you at risk?

People keep using the same weak and repeated passwords, even after they get breached:

  • 57% of people who have already been scammed in phishing attacks still haven’t changed their passwords
  • 71% of accounts are protected by passwords used on multiple websites
  • The password “123456” is still used by 23 million account holders

The Top 4 Password Mistakes You Can Make

Are you confident in your business’ security? Find out for sure by reviewing these common password mistakes:

Length and Complexity

Remember that the easier it is for you to remember a password, the easier it’ll be for a hacker to figure it out. That’s why short and simple passwords are so common—users worry about forgetting them, making them too easy to remember, which presents an easy target for hackers.

Numbers, Case, and Symbols

Another factor in the password’s complexity is whether or not it incorporates numbers, cases, and symbols. While it may be easier to remember a password that’s all lowercase letters, it’s important to mix in numbers, capitals, and symbols to increase the complexity.

Personal Information

Many users assume that information specific to them will be more secure—thinking, for example, that your birthday is one of 365 possible options in a calendar year, not to mention your birth year itself. The same methodology applies to your pet’s name, your mother’s maiden name, etc.

However, given the ubiquity of social media, it’s not difficult for hackers to research a target through Facebook, LinkedIn, and other sites to determine when they were born, information about their family, personal interests, etc.

Pattern and Sequences

Like the other common mistakes, many people use patterns as passwords to remember them better. Still, that makes the password easy to guess. “abc123”, or the first row of letters on the keyboard, “qwerty”, etc., are extremely easy for hackers to guess.

Ready To Put Your Passwords To The Test?

It’s one thing to skim over a list of common password mistakes and assumes you’re probably still OK.

Sure, maybe that one password is based on your pet’s name, or maybe that other password doesn’t have any capitals or numbers—what’s the big deal?

If you’re so confident, then why not put it to the test?

Click here to test how secure your password is—take a few minutes and try a few.

IT Companies in Raleigh

Download Our

IT Company in Raleigh

On What Questions You Need To Ask Before Signing Any Agreement.

Raleigh IT Support

Latest Tweets