Password protection before a thief

A password will definitely help against information infringement, pretend and withdraw money from your account by intentional hackers and thieves. Some of the following tips will help you improve your computer's security.

How are passwords considered to be sure?

A solid and good password should include the following three criteria:

1. There are over 8 characters in length. Short passwords are easier to crack (detect) than long passwords.

2. Include letters, numbers and characters such as:

- Do not continuously or repeat or adjacent letters on the keyboard. Examples are ' 12345678 ', ' 222222 ', ' abcdefg '.

- No common words with letters replaced by numbers or characters such as ' M1cr0 $ 0ft ' or ' P @ ssw0rd '. Unfortunately, hackers also know these tricks.

- Easy for you to remember, but difficult for others and:

  1. Unlike your username, your spouse's name or your date of birth.
  2. Not found in the dictionary, in any language. Hackers use sophisticated tools that can quickly guess the password used from the bases in the dictionary in different languages.
  3. Not hard to remember. Random combinations of letters, numbers and characters must be written to remember easily for yourself.

Picture 1 of Password protection before a thief Create a sure password in 4 steps

1. Think of it as a sentence that you can remember as ' My son was born in 2000 '. It is an easy to remember phrase for you.

2. Take the first letter of each word of the sentence to create a new word. Using the example above you will get: ' cttsn2 '.

3. Certainly by mixing them by using a combination of uppercase and lowercase letters with the same numeric characters. For example: ' CtTsN2 '.

4. Finish, you can replace special characters like letters, to make the password more solid. For example a -> @, o-> 0, s -> $.

Keep your password secret

1. Do not give them to friends or family members (especially young children) who can give passwords to other unreliable individuals.

2. Do not record passwords on the desk. If detected, others will easily access your computer to steal.

3. Never provide your password on email, even if a real company or individual requests it. 'Phishing' scammers can use a phishing email to entice you to reveal your username and password and criminals can access your account, steal your identity and many things. other.

4. Change passwords regularly. Ideally, you should create new strong passwords for you every month.

5. Do not use the same password for many different accounts. You should create a new, secure password every time you open a new account.

6. Never activate password memory (Save Password).

Phan Anh Chuyen