Connect with us

Security

Realistic Password Management Tips

No doubt you have read numerous articles warning you to have strong passwords and a different password for every account. For most people this advice is unrealistic since most of us have at least 20+ accounts all requiring a username and password – everything from online banking, social media profiles, online stores to paying for cinema tickets.

Last updated by

on

No doubt you have read numerous articles warning you to have strong passwords and a different password for every account.

For most people, this advice is unrealistic since most of us have at least 20+ accounts all requiring a username and password – everything from online banking, social media profiles, online stores to paying for cinema tickets.

Here is a simple approach to managing passwords that appears to work for people who don’t want to be bothered with password managers, encrypted drives containing passwords and hiding passwords deep within their computer folders etc.…

Simple Approach to Password Management

The approach takes the path of having 3 levels of passwords:
1) Very sensitive passwords for accounts such as online banking
2) Semi-sensitive passwords for accounts such as social media profiles
3) Non-sensitive passwords for websites that you visit infrequently

Very sensitive passwords

For sensitive accounts such as online banking have very strong passwords and unique for each account. It is ideal to use an online password generator to make a truly random complex password. Still, it will be nearly impossible to remember each one for every sensitive account you have.

To make life easy, think of a phrase or event that is meaningful to you, for example, “I love Corro on TV at 7pm!” – with that phase, replace the text with shorthand and symbols, so it looks like “iluvCoTV@7PM!”.

You could also associate the business name or service within your phase to help remember the password, for example, “ANZ is at 23 Allen St, Newtown!” which can be converted to “ANZis@23AS,NT!”. These are considered strong passwords because they include numbers, lowercase/uppercase text and symbols.

Semi-sensitive passwords

For semi-sensitive accounts, use a password format that you can reuse and can easily change certain characters, for example, “!@12Facebook@!” and “!@12LinkedIn@!” and “!@12Twitter@!”. Then every month, change the number – for example, “!@52Facebook@!” and “!@52LinkedIn@!” and “!@52Twitter@!”.

Of course, please do not follow this pattern since it’s published on a public website – make up your own.

Non-sensitive passwords

For accounts that you infrequently access, use an online password generator to create a complex and unique password for each account.

Of course, having a unique and complex password for each account is ideal, but with many people having over 20+ separate accounts to deal with, you need a simple system that helps you remember passwords – hopefully, this approach can help.

Preventing cybercrime is everyone’s responsibility as we’re all targets whenever we go online. See more articles on cyberattacks and what you can do to prevent it.

Spotify
1password
PartnerStack