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posted by martyb on Tuesday May 26 2020, @04:02AM   Printer-friendly
from the convenience-vs-security dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Even seeing data breaches in the news, more than half of consumers are still reusing passwords.

More than half of people haven't changed their password in the last year – even after they've heard about a data breach in the news.

That’s according to a recent survey, “Psychology of Passwords: The Online Behavior That’s Putting You At Risk,” that examined the online security and password behaviors of 3,250 global respondents – and found that people still employ an alarming number of very common and very risky habits, even though they know better.

Researchers said that password reuse was the biggest security faux pas being committed by respondents. In fact, password reuse has actually gotten worse over the years: When asked how frequently they use the same password or a variation, 66 percent answered “always” or “mostly” – which is up 8 percent from the same survey in 2018.

Worse, 91 percent of respondents said they know using the same (or a variation of the same) password is a risk. They still do so anyways.

“Our survey shows that most people believe they are knowledgeable about the risks of poor password security; however, they are not using that knowledge to protect themselves from cyber threats,” said researchers with LastPass by LogMeIn, in a recent report.

[...] “People seem to be numb to the threats that weak passwords pose,” said researchers. “Technology like biometrics is making it easier for them to avoid text passwords all together and many people are simply comfortable using the ‘forgot password’ link whenever they get locked out of their accounts.”


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  • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Tuesday May 26 2020, @04:23PM

    Fair enough.

    I've been doing this for years and it works for me.

    Note that I don't use that mechanism for all my logins. Only for the ones that *require* really strong passwords (those that could negatively impact me personally or financially).

    I use other mechanisms for less important logins.

    For unimportant ones, I just make something up and use the "forgot password" link if I ever need to log in again.

    I suspect that if you tried* doing this (I believe in you -- so you should too! :) ), you'd be able to remember at least a few, given the special relationship that lyrics have to music and how your brain processes both.

    I say that because remembering someone else's lyric may be difficult for you, but if *you* assign a similar (using the same rhyme/rhythm scheme) lyric and *use* it, remembering it would be much, much easier.

    *They're your credentials and I certainly wouldn't try to tell you what do with them. That said, it couldn't hurt to try, could it? Not necessarily even using it as a password, just as a thought experiment. Or not.

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
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