Passwords are a common form of authentication and are often the
only barrier between a user and your personal information. There are
several programs attackers can use to help guess or "crack" passwords,
but by choosing good passwords and keeping them confidential, you can
make it more difficult for an unauthorized person to access your
information.
Why do you
need a password?
Think about the number
of PIN numbers, passwords, or passphrases you
use every day: getting money from the ATM or using your debit card in
a store, logging on to your computer or email, signing in to an online
bank account or shopping cart...the list seems to just keep getting
longer. Keeping track of all of the number, letter, and word
combinations may be frustrating at times, and maybe you've wondered if
all of the fuss is worth it. After all, what attacker cares about your
personal email account, right?
Or why would someone bother with your
practically empty bank account when there are others with much more
money? Often, an attack is not specifically about your account but
about using the access to your information to launch a larger
attack. And while having someone gain access to your personal email
might not seem like much more than an inconvenience and threat to your
privacy, think of the implications of an attacker gaining access to
your social security number or your medical records.
One of the
best ways to protect information or physical property is
to ensure that only authorized people have access to it. Verifying
that someone is the person they claim to be is the next step, and this
authentication process is even more important, and more difficult, in
the cyber world. Passwords are the most common means of
authentication, but if you don't choose good passwords or keep them
confidential, they're almost as ineffective as not having any password
at all. Many systems and services have been successfully broken
into due to the use of insecure and inadequate passwords, and some
viruses and worms have exploited systems by guessing weak passwords.