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Choosing a Good
Password
Passwords should
satisfy two criteria. They should be:
- easy to remember, and
- hard to guess.
Do NOT use:
- Names:
- of yourself, including nicknames;
- of your spouse or significant
other, of your parents, children, siblings, pets, or other family
members;
- of fictional characters, especially
ones from fantasy or sci-fi stories like Lord_of_the_Rings_ or
Star_Trek_;
- of any place or proper noun;
- of computers or computer systems;
- any combination of any of the
above.
- Numbers, including:
- your phone number;
- your social security number;
- anyone's birthday;
- your driver's license number or
license plate;
- your room number or address;
- any common number like 3.1415926 or
1.618034;
- any series such as 1248163264;
- any combination of any of the
above.
- Any username in any form, including:
- capitalized (Joeuser);
- doubled (joeuserJoeuser);
- reversed (resueoJ);
- reflected (joeuserResueoj);
- with numbers or symbols appended (Joeuser!).
- Any word in any dictionary in any
language in any form.
- Any word you think isn't in a
dictionary, including:
- any slang word or obscenity;
- any technical term or jargon (BartleMUD,
microfortnight, Oobleck).
- Any common phrase:
- "Go ahead, make my day."
- "Brother, can you spare a dime?"
- "1 fish, 2 fish, red fish, blue
fish."
- Simple patterns, including:
- passwords of all the same letter;
- simple keyboard patterns (querty,
asdfjkl);
- anything that someone might easily
recognize if they see you typing it.
- Any information about you that is
easily obtainable:
- favorite color;
- favorite rock group.
- Any object that is in your field of
vision at your workstation.
- Any password that you have used in
the past.
There are programs (and they are easy to
write) which will crack passwords that are based on the above.
Do:
- Change your password once a month.
- Use numbers with letters (although it
must begin with an alphabetic character).
- Create simple mnemonics (memory aids)
or compounds that are easily remembered, yet hard to decipher:
- "aR2s2uaPssWDS" for "Acronyms are
too short to use as passwords!"
- "IwadaSnatCwt2bmPbtct." for "It was
a dark and stormy night, and the crackers were trying to break my
password, but they couldn't."
- "HmPwaCciaCccP?" for "How many
passwords would a cracker crack if a cracker could crack passwords?"
- Use two or more words together (Yet_Another_Example).
- Use misspelled words (WhutdooUmeenIkan'tSpel?).
- Finally, NEVER write your
password down anywhere, nor share your password with anyone, including
your best friend!
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