A foolproof technique to secure your online accounts
Slate Magazine writer Farhad Manjoo offered one of the best systems I’ve ever seen to create secure passwords for your online accounts. Memorization has never been a strong point for me and security online is so important today so this idea is a God send. Here’s a bit of the article
“I found a foolproof technique to create passwords that are near-impossible to crack yet easy to remember. Even better, it’ll take just five minutes of your time. Ready?
Start with an original but memorable phrase. For this exercise, let’s use these two sentences: I like to eat bagels at the airport and My first Cadillac was a real lemon so I bought a Toyota. The phrase can have something to do with your life or it can be a random collection of words – just make sure it’s something you can remember. That’s the key: Because a mnemonic is easy to remember, you don’t have to write it down anywhere. (If you can’t remember it without writing it down, it’s not a good mnemonic.) This reduces the chance that someone will guess it if he gets into your computer or your e-mail. What’s more, a relatively simple mnemonic can be turned into a fanatically difficult password.
Which brings us to Step 2: Turn your phrase into an acronym. Be sure to use some numbers and symbols and capital letters, too. I like to eat bagels at the airport becomes Ilteb@ta, and My first Cadillac was a real lemon so I bought a Toyota is M1stCwarlsIbaT.
That’s it – you’re done. These mnemonic passwords are hard to forget, but they contain no guessable English words. You can even create pass phrases for specific sites that are coded with a hint about their purpose. A sentence like It’s 20 degrees in February, so I use Gmail lets you set a new Gmail password every month and still never forget it: i90diSsIuG for September, i30diMsIuG for March, etc. (These aren’t realistic temperatures; they’re the month-number multiplied by 10.)”
Read more here… | Source: Slate.com | Date posted: 12/23/2010