Is Yours on the List?
Despite hacks and data breaches becoming commonplace, it seems most people are still picking a password based on convenience rather than security.
A study of 61 million leaked passwords by Virginia Tech university and security firm Dashlane has revealed the most common passwords of the last year.
It found that emotionally fuelled phrases such as ‘f***you’ and ‘iloveyou’ are often chosen by users when setting a password for an online account.
Predictably, the likes of ‘qwerty’ and ‘123456’ also rank high on the list.
The list of leaked passwords also suggest people often turn to their favourite brands, films, music, pop culture icons, and football teams when looking for inspiration.
Dr Gang Wang from Virginia Tech partnered with password manager software Dashlane to compile the list of 2017’s most popular passwords.
After analysing 61.5 million passwords leaked from 107 online services over the last eight years, Dr Wang discovered that 52 per cent of users re-use passwords between their online accounts.
Dr Wang said: ‘It is difficult for humans to memorise unique passwords for the 150+ accounts the average person has.
‘Inevitably, people reuse or slightly modify them, which is a dangerous practice.
‘This danger has been amplified by the massive data breaches which have given attackers more effective tools for guessing and hacking passwords.’
The study also found users often favoured phrases around love, with ‘beautiful’, ‘lovelove’ and ‘iloveyou’ ranking highly in the list.
Another common theme was vulgarity, with the likes of ‘bulls***’ and ‘f***off’ both used frequently enough to make the top 10.
LinkedIn and MySpace were two of the top three brands used as passwords, ranked first and third respectively, despite both experiencing sizeable breaches in 2016.
The second most popular brand name was American muscle car ‘Mustang’.
Dashlane, a digital security company, partnered with Dr Gang Wang from Virginia Tech to create the list of 2017’s most popular passwords. After looking at 61 million leaked passwords, the researchers found people had a tendency to opt for familiarity over security
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