It turns out we really are rubbish at changing our passwords – with perennial culprits cropping up again and again on the most recent list of the world’s worst passwords.
Security firm SplashData has analysed more than 3.3 million passwords across the world to compile its round up of the world’s most common passwords, with a few usual suspects dominating the list.
‘123456’ tops the list, closely followed by ‘password’, as they have done every year since the survey began in 2011, with ‘12345’, ‘12345678’ and ‘qwerty’ making up the top five.
In order to minimise the risk of being hacked, SplashData is advising people to follow a few simple steps, including not using the same password for multiple websites or accounts. Using favourite sports, teams, first names or your birth year as part of or the whole of the password is also a big no-no.
The ideal password should be eight characters or more with mixed types of characters, the company says.
“Passwords based on simple patterns on your keyboard remain popular despite how weak they are,” said Morgan Slain, CEO of SplashData. “Any password using numbers alone should be avoided, especially sequences. As more websites require stronger passwords or combinations of letters and numbers, longer keyboard patterns are becoming common passwords, and they are still not secure.”
“The bad news from my research is that this year’s most commonly used passwords are pretty consistent with prior years,” Burnett said. “The good news is that it appears that more people are moving away from using these passwords. In 2014, the top 25 passwords represented about 2.2 percent of passwords exposed. While still frightening, that’s the lowest percentage of people using the most common passwords I have seen in recent studies.”
SplashData’s ‘Worst Passwords Of 2014’ were:
Rank | Password | Change from 2013 |
1 | 123456 | No Change |
2 | password | No Change |
3 | 12345 | Up 17 |
4 | 12345678 | Down 1 |
5 | qwerty | Down 1 |
6 | 123456789 | No Change |
7 | 1234 | Up 9 |
8 | baseball | New |
9 | dragon | New |
10 | football | New |
11 | 1234567 | Down 4 |
12 | monkey | Up 5 |
13 | letmein | Up 1 |
14 | abc123 | Down 9 |
15 | 111111 | Down 8 |
16 | mustang | New |
17 | access | New |
18 | shadow | Unchanged |
19 | master | New |
20 | michael | New |
21 | superman | New |
22 | 696969 | New |
23 | 123123 | Down 12 |
24 | batman | New |
25 | trustno1 | Down 1 |
Are you an Internet security expert? Take our quiz!
Thoma Bravo agrees to acquire Darktrace for $5.32 billion in cash, delivering some welcome news…
Customer adoption of AI services embedded in cloud services continues to deliver results for Microsoft,…
TikTok's 'secret source' algorithm is so core to ByteDance, it would rather shut down US…
After relocating from California to Texas in 2020, Oracle's Larry Ellison now reveals plan to…
Share price hit after Meta admits heavy AI spending plans, after posting strong first quarter…
For third time Google delays phase-out of third-party Chrome cookies after pushback from industry and…