Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “How Do Passwords Get Stolen?”.
Odds are that the keys to your car or your house are never too far from your site since having them stolen would mean breaking a window to get back in or calling a lockout service at best, or I guess, there’s the worst case scenario of having someone Be able to go into your house rifle through all your stuff and drive off in your VW bus or whatever it is you use to get around. Fortunately, keeping track of a single physical key or a few on a keychain isn’t too hard, but online passwords can be a little bit trickier to manage as the fact that many users have tons of them to keep track of and the fact that they’re stored on A bunch of servers somewhere instead of being a physical thing you carry around in your pocket, gives miscreants more opportunities to pry into your online life. But how exactly do passwords get stolen? I mean very supposed to be encrypted right. Well, yes, but you might be surprised to know that many times passwords aren’t stolen by some crack group of cyber criminals using super fancy hacking techniques, but are instead harvested through social engineering methods, where the bad guys will straight-up ask for someone else’s password. This usually takes the form of a phishing attempt where some malcontent will send you an email or a steam message that claims to be from your ISP or your bank or valve, asking you to send your login credentials for some vague security related reason. There’S a similar concept called tab napping where you will actually get redirected to a fake website. That’S built to look as much like the real thing as possible where you well enter your login information, because the page looks official, even if you’re tech savvy are smart enough to realize. What’S going on, when you see a phishing attempt, it’s actually still quite easy to inadvertently click links in scam, emails or dodgy websites that install key loggers onto your system and send every you type, including passwords back to an attacker. That’S how I got nabbed keyloggers, don’t require a whole lot of technical expertise to use making them a popular choice for amateur online feeds and then once someone unscrupulous has your username and password combo.
It’S quite easy for them to use automated tools that will try your credentials on lots of different websites and since statistics have shown us that over 1/2 of all Internet users reuse the same password on multiple sites. There is a distinct possibility that if your password for one site is stolen, your other accounts could be compromised as well, but, let’s suppose you’re quite careful about phishing and suspicious links, and you use a unique password for every site. Exactly how safe are you well if an attacker exploits vulnerabilities in a server security and is able to find encrypted passwords, they could break the encryption if it’s not sufficiently strong or if the password themselves aren’t very long, a common way that password dumps that leaked your Credentials to the entire Internet can happen. Even a mid-range, modern, home computer can guess millions of passwords per second and billions if it uses a discreet graphics card, meaning that many passwords can be cracked within just a few days or even hours. If you’re using commonly used words or phrases, but you obviously don’t have much control over how the sites that you use store your passwords. So we’re planning a follow-up video coming soon on what you can do to make your own passwords as secure as possible and keep prying eyes away from your stuff. Spoiler alert passwords like QWERTY and one two, three, four: five: six, our terrible ideas and yet they’re used. All too often and are very easy for attackers to guess so maybe don’t put those questionable conversations you had with your ex behind a password that week and with all this talk of encryption tunnel, there seems like an appropriate thing to bring up tamil Bayer VPN lets.
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