Advice to IT managers and individuals for World Password Day.
Welcome to Cyber Security Today. It’s Wednesday, May 4th, 2022. I’m Howard Solomon, contributing reporter on cybersecurity for ITWorldCanada.com.
Tomorrow is World Password Day. It’s a day when everyone should think about the passwords they have and how to safely keep track of them. I know, passwords are a drag. A good one is hard to create and you need to have a different one for each site you log into. That’s right: Creating one safe password and using it for your company login, your company email login, your personal email login, your bank login, your Twitter, Facebook and everything else — that’s a formula for disaster. Because once crooks figure out one of your passwords, they’ll try it on everything else they think you subscribe to. There are password-less solutions like fingerprint readers and facial recognition on laptops, smartphones and tablets. It’s important you enroll and use them. Even then you probably need a password or PIN number as a backup in case the biometric fails — they can be finicky. So what should you do? First, get a software password manager. It may already be part of your antivirus suite. Password managers keep your passwords secure. If you want, they can create scrambled passwords you don’t ever have to remember. Good ones work across all your devices — PCs, smartphones and tablets. Some listeners already know about password managers because their companies make employees use one. Reviews of password managers can be found on reputable websites like PC Magazine. Second, make sure every password you create is long — at least 12 characters. And third, where it is offered use multifactor authentication to add an extra level of login protection. Ideally the MFA should be delivered by an app like Google Authenticator or Microsoft Authenticator.
As for IT leaders, World Password Day poses a problem: Employees may create safe passwords for work, and you should exercise control through login rules to make sure the passwords are long enough and aren’t simple to break. You know, like not using ‘Monday12345678’ as a password. But there’s no guarantee employees aren’t re-using the same passwords for sites they go to outside of work. So you need to do four things: If your firm isn’t off passwords now, move to password-less solutions as soon as possible. If you can’t drop passwords get an enterprise password manager employees have to use. Add multi-factor authentication for extra protection — especially for staff with access to everything like the IT department. And educate your employees about the creation of safe passwords at work and at home, and why they have to create a different one for every site they use.
SUBSCRIBE NOW
Related articles
Become a member
New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways