Experts Reveal The 10 Passwords That Can Be Hacked In One Second And How To Make Your Passwords Bulletproof

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About a month ago, I got a text from my brother that said ‘Dude, what’s up with your recent Facebook activity?’ I logged on to find that someone had hacked into my account and changed my profile picture to Alicia Keys with a goatee and posted a video on my timeline of aliens snorting cocaine accompanied with the caption ‘My weekend be like…’. Ok, that part wasn’t too far off, which makes it even scarier.

But hacking can be far worse than a couple profile update that make you look like a boner to all your friends and family. Many of us have been on the short end of a fraudulent bank account attack, where we have to file a claim, cancel our cards, and audit our statements going forward. That shit’s for the birds.

In any event, tech experts from online electrical retailer AO.com have revealed the ten most commonly used passwords, including a couple that would take less than one second to crack.

Via Daily Mail:

The easiest passwords to crack:

123456                   1234567890

123456789            1234567

qwerty                    password

12345678              123123

111111                       987654321

While some think choosing passwords based on memorable words makes you bulletproof, this idea couldn’t be any further from the truth. Hackers will go after personal information such as a date of birth, pet’s name or the street you grew up on, which can easily be pulled from social media profiles.

Words to avoid in your passwords:

Your name, partner’s or pet’s name

Your pet’s name

The name of the street you grew up on

Your favorite place to go on vacation

Favorite sports team

Daily Mail reports that xxperts from the Home Office’s Cyber Aware campaign advise choosing a password that’s made up of three random, unrelated words such as ‘teabrownpicture,’ which would take 35,000 years to crack. Adding a number will add complicate things by 227 million years.

Experts also advise that although it may be difficult to juggle, one should have different passwords for different accounts (i.e. online banking and social media).

 

Matt Keohan Avatar
Matt’s love of writing was born during a sixth grade assembly when it was announced that his essay titled “Why Drugs Are Bad” had taken first prize in D.A.R.E.’s grade-wide contest. The anti-drug people gave him a $50 savings bond for his brave contribution to crime-fighting, and upon the bond’s maturity 10 years later, he used it to buy his very first bag of marijuana.