1 / 1

Unlimited Backlinks: 2 Things I Wish I'd Known Earlier

Keeping a safe computer system is a great defense against becoming a victim of Identity Theft. Use a secure password. By safe and secure, I suggest a password that is not quickly guessable, such as a word you might find in the dictionary. These kinds of passwords can be found by somebody using what is known as a "dictionary attack" This type of attack includes using the words that are found in the dictionary and comparing those to a hash that has been generated by the Os. If the attack matches the hashes, then the password has actually been compromised. Don't use birthdays or Social Security Numbers also. It has been recommended that your password be at least 8 characters long, including small and capital letters, numbers, and special characters.

i8kvure110
Download Presentation

Unlimited Backlinks: 2 Things I Wish I'd Known Earlier

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Keeping a secure computer is an excellent defense versus ending up being a victim of Identity Theft. Utilize a protected password. By secure, I indicate a password that is not easily guessable, such as a word you might find in the dictionary. These kinds of passwords can be discovered by someone using what is called a "dictionary attack" This kind of attack involves using the words that are found in the dictionary and comparing those to a hash that has actually been generated by the Os. If the attack matches the hashes, then the password has actually been compromised. Do not use birthdays or Social Security Numbers too. It has actually been suggested that your password be at least 8 characters long, including little and uppercase, numbers, and special characters. A password like "alphabet" can quickly be compromised. If you were to alter it up a little by making every other letter a capital, unlimitedbacklinks "AlPhAbEt", this will enhance the security. You can then take it an action further and replace the "E" with the number "3", so then your password appears like "AlPhAb3t". Then take the "l" and alter it to the number "1" and even the "!". So now the password looks like "A!PhAb3t". It will take an incredibly computer an extremely long period of time to break this password. At this point the aggressor would need to use an approach known as "brute force". That suggests the attacker is taking every possible mix of numbers and letters and unique characters and developing a hash to try and match the hash saved by the computer system. To prevent yourself from being subjected to a "strength" attack, you can establish a security policy that will disable the account after a particular variety of unsuccessful efforts. To even more prevent yourself from being jeopardized given that there are programs that can download the hashes kept in your computer, you might wish to set some kind of time limit for your passwords. A good example would be that the password would need to be altered every 90 days, and the exact same password can't be utilized within a 180 period. This will assist guarantee that if somebody did get the hash of your password, that by the time it is jeopardized, it would be an obsolete password. Attempt to check your logs to see if there have been any attempts on the password. This will definitely let you know if somebody is taking a look at your computer system in order to jeopardize the information that is stored on it. By preserving a protected password, you are making sure that your personal information will stay private.

More Related