It is a hacker’s dream. Even in the face of repeated warnings to protect online accounts, a new study reveals that “admin” is the most commonly used password in the UK.
The second most popular, “123456”, is also unlikely to keep hackers at bay.
It’s not just a problem here – Australians, Americans and Germans also use “admin” more than any other password when accessing websites, apps and logging in to their computers. Around the world, “123456” emerges as the most popular.
Luckily for me my password is ******
Edit: weird lemmy automatically replaced my password with ‘*’
Huh, let me try: hunter2
It really works! I only see ******* !
Classic
I only came for the list of most popular passwords. I am disappointed.
Picked up a keyboard at the thrift with a pink sticky note on the bottom:
user:adminpass:passwordYes, someone had to write that down.
I’m their defense sometimes you have to be reminded that something that terrible was used
The second most popular, “123456”, is also unlikely to keep hackers at bay.
That’s what I use on my luggage
6 digits for luggage?
12345 was made popular by a documentary several years ago. So I updated my luggage.
/s
It’s a reference to Spaceballs if you were out of the loop.
I was out of the loop, thanks for the clarification.
You should enable MFA on your luggage
You know you say that more than likely in jest…
But that’s honestly not a terrible idea.
No, it is a terrible idea. The lock is not the weak point on the luggage, it’s the zipper.
Overall I think the weakest part of luggage is its unusually high liklihood of attack by state adversaries. :p
Don’t use shit passwords. Don’t reuse passwords. Get a password manager. Use 2fa.
I reuse passwords on sites where I don’t care if my account gets breached.
On sites where it matters, I store them in a password manager.
On sites where money is managed, I keep the passwords only in my mind.
Use mfa not 2fa
I’ve “hacked” web apps by logging in with “user - password” or something equally inane.
But, my long-time sole password of TrustNo1 should be good right??
Invent your own hashing algorithm. It’s easy, fool-proof, secure, and reusable without compromising security.
Here’s a few examples: ebay.com password is moc.y4b3-saltyboi69 lemmy.world password is dlr0w.ymm3l-saltyboi69
(These aren’t real btw)
people writing password crackers are smarter than that dude
Most compromised passwords are used by script kiddies in mass attacks, not targeted attacks by elite hacking squads. If a password fails verbatim, they just move on to the next compromised account of millions, not develop pattern recognition software to try to figure out replacement candidates for each website.
You sound pretty unqualified to judge smartness.




