Fri Jul 7, 2006 12:59PM EDT
See Comments (40)
Start Your 30 minute Password Makeover
Commit to writing down all the websites or networks where you use a password. Only write down the name of the site, and your user name, NOT your passwords. A master list of passwords is an open invitation for someone to access your accounts: roommate, co-worker, burglar, kids.
Security Levels: High, Medium, and Low
Once that list is done, divide the sites into three categories: high-security, medium-security and low-security.
High-security logons should include anything associated with money or sensitive personal information: financial brokerages, online banking, PayPal, travel sites that store your credit card numbers, any site that has your social security number (school site, medical insurance site, tax site), and your work network.
Medium-security logons should include anything of a personal nature: your email accounts, your ISP account at home, your alumni network, instant messaging logons.
Low-security logons can consist of email groups, news sites that require a logon, or random sites that require you provide a password.
Assign a password to each group
To cover the requirements for all logons, make your passwords eight characters long and a combination of numbers, letters (including at least one uppercase letter), and a symbol, like an *, %, or #. One tip for creating a memorable password is to script it like a vanity license plate: Pr3t3nd$ (Pretends), W8ing4U2 (waiting for you two).
Change your passwords
Now go through your list of high-, medium-, and low-security sites and networks and change the passwords of your accounts. On your master list of accounts and user names, instead of writing the password next to the account, just indicate which security class it's in: high, medium, or low. You know those three passwords by heart (this is the challenge here—you have to memorize those three passwords).
Where to Use Your Passwords
Access your high-security passwords only from home or on trusted computers, never on a public computer that might contain a key-logger. Key-loggers are software programs that record every stroke typed on the computer including every user name and password you enter.
Use your medium-security passwords based on your own judgment—in an Eastern European Internet Café? Not a good idea. In your university's computer lab? That's a better gamble.
Low-security passwords can be used on any public account; if someone gets access to your New York Times log-in? That's not a big deal.
Good luck, stay safe, and hopefully you'll never be locked out of your own accounts again.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Every time I want to login I have to go to "forgot password" because no matter what I set my password as it never works. I know I am typing it correctly I wait before I login again so that it has time to be set.I write it down ay home. I repeat it over and over again and still nothing. Why does it not recognize my password. This is get to be very frustrating. And its so hard to find costumer service on here the Questionair is great but I tried that and none of these are working in my case...I am cocedering changing to another site if this cannot be prevented. Why bother setting a password if I'm just going to have to say I forgot it the next time I login. I'd much rather have you take a look into it and hopefully fix the problem. it is far to much work to write everyone i know and tell them my e-mail address has changed.....Please help. P.S. you should also conceder making it easier for people to write to you with technical questions. I'm sure you don't have many since it all pretty much explains itself. But what happens when it dosn't? Thank you! R.W.
This helps a lot. I have the same password that is 8 numbers long for all my accounts and now I know why my accounts are being stolen. Thanks for this.
If you know another language, use that. Or use a fantasy word, like from fictional books. Putting numbers at the beginning and middle, not just the end, should help as well. And you could use random everyday words, because someone would have to go through the entire English language to decode that, and I highly doubt they'd make it.
Wow, this rocks thanks.
Another good idea for making a password is to take multiple words, an intertwine them.... heres an example... My name is Robert Franklin Greene (this is not my password, dont waste your time trying it... lol.) I would take the first letter of each word, then the second letter, then the third, etc, etc, etc. so it would look like this: RfgOrrBaeEneRlnTien This can be done with any number of words, and any number of letters in the word... Take Yahoos advice on the high level security passwords though, a program called "Brute force" could easily come up with any word of just letters, and would take only slightly longer for letters and numbers. Use letters, numbers, and symbols to be safe.
Here is a good idea. Take the first letters of the line to a favorite song. "You are the sunshine of my life" Becomes YATSOML. If you want to or have to add numbers put in the last 4 digits of your boyfriend's parents phone number or your sister's birthday somthing like that. Then you've go YATSOML4414 or YATSOML115 and nobody will ever crack it.
For those posting comments about log-in problems with yahoo, you need to go to yahoo help and ask them what's going on. Jade, are you sure yahoo didn't delete your account? They did that to one of mine, and it kept telling me my password was incorrect when i tried to log in.
thanks for the advice! my myspace profile has been hacked twice, once it was completely deleted and I had to make a new one. I change the password regularly, but now I know how to make it so that no one can hack it! also thanks to sacoressel. i just entered a bunch of fake information that is easy for me to remember into my yahoo and AIM accounts, so my sister can't change my password! ;]
I use the same password for all my accounts, but I add the first three letters of each account to my base password. For example, say my base p/w is jabberwock. For an account named, let us say, Snoogle, I would use "jabberwockSno". Actually in creating a p/w like jabberwock I would not use two b's and I would convert e into a number equalling the number of letters in the base p/w. Also, I would capitalize the 2nd and next to last letters of the base. Thus jAb9rwoCkSno.
Great advice, I like using old addresses. I am an older guy so I use my childhood address, my middle school address, and the first place I lived when I moved out of home. So I have a high security, a medium security, and hardly any security...LOL
im so glad that you told me because maybe i would use something like password or something like that but thank you really.
the reason your bro can get into your account is that he sends a request for forgotten password and he either knows your alternate email id or he knows all your details you provided eg-if you forget your password some sites will ask for your birth date and maybe your pets name...he must know those
I changed my things and no one can get into my e-mail.
I never even have to worry about making a new password. See, when I was just getting on to the internet and such, my parents made up a password for me and my siblings to use that is totally uncrackable, unless you are told what it is. My grandfather altered it slightly and often uses it as well. It`s an 8 letter thing and it`s extremely easy to remember, but it has nothing to do with anything. Of course, I do make up new passwords for those things I don`t want my little sister and brother to log into, lol xD
wow this helped alot thanks for the tips
I am an admin.and I can't logon to computer,It keeps telling me that admin. had logon for me.
One idea that I use often is the name of a *previous* pet -- not an animal that you have now, but one that you had in the past. If it's a common pet name like Beau, Socks, or Jake, then add the year you got him/her, or maybe the house number or area code where you used to live when you had that particular pet. Random strangers, coworkers, burglars, or boyfriends/girlfriends wouldn't be able to guess that, surely.
you also forgot "123654" as a common password
WOW this site it very helpful. I just hope that this works. There are a lot of hackers out there that read this kind of stuff and find ways around it.
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6 Posted by faithwoman072000 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:58PM EDT Report Abuse
I think I understand better about passwords. I was doing it the other way around and trying to make up a password for each account (time-consuming) Making up a password for the three groups (High, Medium Low) Not such a bad idea Easy actually.