How to secure your passwords

The measure of how difficult it is to crack a password is called its strength. This generally refers to the number of attempts that an attacker needs to guess a password successfully.

Computer scientists measure password strength in terms of the number of bits it takes to express and store the password in question. If it takes eight bytes (64 bits) to store a password, in theory it should take 264 attempts to crack it. For every extra bit, the number of possible combinations will double.

L0phtcrack

In our test, it took just 29 seconds to crack the password 'elephant'. A longer password of 'hippopotamus' took just 32 seconds to crack – so it's clearly not a good idea to use a word from the dictionary.

The licensed version of L0phtcrack really enables you to test your password's strength by testing it not only against a dictionary, but also against a huge number of possible number and letter combinations of variable length. Eventually all passwords can be cracked using this option.

To protect yourself, change your password regularly. If security has been breached, the hacker will be cracking an out-of-date password and you'll remain safe.

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First published in PC Plus Issue 289

Liked this? Then check out 10 easy ways to boost your online security

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