Opfom study in 2013 has shown that 55% of the people reuse the exact same password on multiple sites. Then I respectfully say you may need to rethink your situation. For every degree of difficulty leads to exponential time required to crack. That alone will increase the complexity of your login being breached. Pick one of many qualified password silos to use to help outbrain it and call it a day. I'm a huge fan of 2FA, but I also think common sense approach of having different keys for different locks isn't hard to do. If unique to all passwords were instigated 1 hash table decrypt from Yahoo would only lead to Yahoo and only as long as the site hacked left it to the user to redo their password. ![]() So unless you have new data that shows that "Most people" have moved into a variation of passwordings off non-dictionary based/home/pet/dob/significantother/child/capitalizationoffullname/etc (which is what I see a ton of) then I think from my vantage we're still doing a poor job of first intrusion protection. As a consultant, you don't know how many times a year I am passed an excel sheet full of minor variances of logins. Ask your family and that boss that keeps all his icons on his desktop. ![]() ![]() I respectfully disagree (to passwords.) Most people DO have similar passwords.
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