
If you missed it, Ars Technica's Dan Goodin wrote a fascinating article this week on why passwords have never been weaker -- and crackers have never been stronger. Goodin explains the importance of unique, generated passwords for all of your accounts, tackling concepts like hashing, dictionary attacks, rainbow tables, and salting. The main take-away points:
- Passwords are less secure than even a few years ago, thanks to advancements in hardware and password-cracking techniques, including the sheer speed at which they can be executed
- Hackers have created rules and algorithms to cut through our "clever password tricks"
- It's critical to use a unique password for each site, and a password manager is the best way to achieve this
- 38% of us would rather clean a toilet than think of a new password << Apparently this study also showed 38% would rather do house chores than create a new username or password. Good thing LastPass can do the dirty work for you!
- Can you trust your browser with your passwords? << An interesting look at the options available for Internet Explorer 9, Firefox 14, and Chrome 21 - looks like Firefox wins, but Geier cautions that prying eyes, malware, and a crashed hard drive are still major risks, so using a password manager is recommended.
- 9 things you absolutely must do to keep your online identity safe << Great tips from the folks at Gizmodo, although we'd go with "diversifying" your passwords over "fortifying" them. Unique, strong passwords on all accounts = the best way to recover when an account is compromised, and prevents the compromise of multiple accounts.