Mon Feb 25, 2008 2:23PM EST
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When I first clicked on this article, I expected to see yet another diatribe telling you to use numbers, mixed-case letters, and special characters when you created a password. Boy was I wrong.
Get past some of the geeky language and you'll find a truly eye-opening story about the security of passwords in Windows.
Some key points from the piece (at least, points that challenge the conventional wisdom of password security):
Surprisingly, Mark Burnett's piece dates back to 2002, but the lessons are still relevant today. Give it a spin. Maybe consider changing your passwords this weekend.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
In this article you say change passwords in another you say don't! Al e-mail: almailey@yahoo.com
What i think is that if someone is stupid enough to make their password easy to be cracked then its their fault, simple as that, and for those hackers and crackers out there, good job showing the slobs that they cant have their password that simple ;)
For real , I'm 100% agree with the author. I change my password every 2 months and that's why I can relax and don't think about any hackers! This information is short enough but informative and very useful :)
if a hacker is smart enough to crack a password for anything, than what password is safe? no matter what length of the password, if a hacker wants it bad enough they are going to get it one way or another.
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1 Posted by fran27kb on Sun Jan 21, 2007 5:16AM EST Report Abuse
Kyle is the coolest!And I like the story.It helped me alittle bit. THANKS ALOT!