{"id":151628,"date":"2016-10-06T10:19:00","date_gmt":"2016-10-06T15:19:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ntegrait.com\/hacker-proof-passwords\/"},"modified":"2024-02-06T11:49:02","modified_gmt":"2024-02-06T11:49:02","slug":"hacker-proof-passwords","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ntegrait.com\/hacker-proof-passwords\/","title":{"rendered":"Hacker-Proof Passwords"},"content":{"rendered":"
One way cybersecurity can be improved to a great degree is by creating strong, hard-to-decipher passwords that are difficult for hackers to discern. These days, cybercriminals are highly motivated, and can get at simply hashed, basic, alpha-numeric passwords using various methods. There’s good advice all over the Net on the creation and maintaining of passwords that can withstand hacks and exploits that target sensitive data through the decryption of passwords. Shyam Gollakota and his colleagues at the University of Washington have figured out an ingenious way to take the air out of short-range communication (If this wireless communication contains sensitive information, like a password): Send the signal through the user’s body.<\/p>\n
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Short of re-routing invisible beams through the body, Cornel University gives this advice in their NetID department for creating stronger, more hacker-proof passwords<\/a>:<\/p>\n For Better, Stronger Passwords<\/strong><\/p>\n Experts recommend that your password be a complex sequence of letters, numbers, and symbols, but also one you can ultimately memorize (if you have the cognitive skills), as difficult as it may seem at first. They remind us that quite often, even a determined cybercriminal can be thwarted by a well-encrypted, complex password.<\/p>\n Also advised by most authorities on cybersecurity is that you don’t write passwords down anywhere conspicuous, and don’t share them with anyone. And, if you do write it down somewhere, make sure it’s kept in a place where no one can find it, for example on a post-it note stuck inside a secret pocket or place – someplace on your person, not in your desk or stuck to your monitor. And, as hard as it may be to do this, experts also advise having a separate encrypted-phrase password for each account log-in you navigate throughout your day. There are also secure password generators<\/a> that can create new passwords endlessly for you.<\/p>\n\n