Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

DO NOT SHARE THEM CARELESSLY

  • Do not write them on a sticky note and post them near where they will be used, or which could be lost or taken by any passer-by.

  • Do not put them underneath your keyboard.  That’s one of the first places someone looking to get into your password-protected items will look!

  • DO look at and select a password vault of some kind to store them in, whether it be physical or software, and be sure to lock that, and update it every time a password is changed.  A good software vault is Bitwarden.  If you choose to use a software vault, make sure you record its password in a safe place. Passwords (keys) that are stuck in a vault that you cannot open aren’t terribly useful!

Top of page

CHANGING PASSWORDS (Only change them when there is a reason)

  • If it is a shared password, and one or more people who legitimately had access to it no longer should, it’s probably time to change your password, unless you prefer leaving the pathway to your valuable item(s) essentially wide open.

  • If you have had the same password for something for a long time, and have used it at all, it is probably time to change it. Bored people LOVE puzzles because they give them something to do. Unchanging passwords are just asking for someone with nothing better to do to crack them.

    • If there is no access to the password, or what it protects, there’s little need to change it.  For example, that password vault that you don’t let anyone near, and never share the key (password) with anyone.

Top of page

CREATE SECURE PASSWORDS

Passwords should:

  • Be at least 8 characters long

  • Include at least one upper case letter

  • Include at least one lower case letter

  • Include at least one number

  • Include at least one “special character”, such as the following: !@#$%^&*().  These are essentially “capital” numbers.

Passwords should not

  • Be the same as our login name

  • Be an easily guessed consecutive string such as 12345 or ABCDE, or even 1234abcd

  • Be your SSN or some other important ID number

  • Be your name, or those of your family, pets, or coworkers (flattering as that might be for some)

  • Be an address, though that might otherwise be a reasonably secure password. 

    • I.E. 123_My_House!  ← While this fits all the “shoulds”, it is a bad idea!

Info

Creating pronounceable passwords, while good for memorizing them, is not the most secure way to go.  If you want a pronounceable password, you should create it as such, and then replace some letters with similar-appearing numbers and special characters.  For example, a password containing the letter “i” might have that “i” replaced with a 1 or a !.

Remember, these are the keys to all your important valuables.  Treat them as such!

...