Tag Archive for: Resolve

This New Year, why not resolve to ditch your dodgy old passwords?


Most of the classic New Year resolutions revolve around improving your health and lifestyle. But this year, why not consider cleaning up your passwords too?

We all know the habits to avoid, yet so many of us do them anyway: using predictable passwords, never changing them, or writing them on sticky notes on our monitor. We routinely ignore the recommendations for good passwords in the name of convenience.

What’s wrong with your pa$$w0rd?

Choosing short passwords containing common names or words is likely to lead to trouble. Hackers can often guess a person’s passwords simply by using a computer to work through a long list of commonly used words.

The most popular choices have changed very little over time, and include numerical combinations such as “123456” (the most common password for five years in a row), “love”, keyboard patterns such as “qwerty” and, perhaps most ludicrously, “password” (or its Portuguese translation, “senha”).

2017-2019* list of common passwords from SplashData, 2020-2021# from NordPass.

Experts have long advised against using words, places or names in passwords, although you can strengthen this type of password by jumbling the components into sequences with a mixture of upper- and lowercase characters, as long as you do it thoroughly.




Read more:
A computer can guess more than 100,000,000,000 passwords per second. Still think yours is secure?


Complex rules often lead users to choose a word or phrase and then substitute letters with numbers and symbols (such as “Pa33w9rd!”), or add digits to a familiar password (“password12”). But so many people do this that these techniques don’t actually make passwords stronger.

It’s better to start with a word or two that isn’t so common, and make sure you mix things up with symbols and special characters in the middle. For example, “wincing giraffe” could be adapted to “W1nc1ng_!G1raff3”




Read more:
Choose better passwords with the help of science


These secure passwords can be harder to remember,…

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Buffalo Public Schools working to resolve ransomware attack


The school district posted on Twitter Saturday morning saying it’s working with “technology industry experts and law authorities to resolve the ransomware event.”

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The Buffalo Public School District says it’s still working to resolve problems connected to a ransomware attack on its computer system Friday.

The school district posted on Twitter Saturday morning saying it’s working with “technology industry experts and law authorities to resolve the ransomware event.” 

The Buffalo Public School District went on to say that it continues to work on protecting its information systems and will provide updates as “progress is made toward Monday’s school day.”

Superintendent Dr. Kriner Cash told reporters Friday that if the situation is not resolved over the weekend school may be canceled next week. All remote instruction was cancelled Friday as a result of the ransomware event. 

According to Cash, the school district approved a $40,000 emergency contract with Grey Castle for a cyber security investigation. The FBI is also assisting the district.

School officials say no demands have been made at this time; however, they say the FBI believes the ransom may be between $100,000 to $300,000 and could be negotiable.

“This could have a significant impact on our operations going forward into next week,” Cash said. “We are hoping that we can solve this issue this weekend. We will be bringing the consultant on site and getting to work right away, but it may take time, and we just don’t know until we know exactly the depth and the breadth of the problem.”


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Flagstaff News Flagstaff district scrambles to resolve cyber security issue Associated Press 5:52 PM, Sep – ABC15 Arizona

Flagstaff News Flagstaff district scrambles to resolve cyber security issue Associated Press 5:52 PM, Sep  ABC15 Arizona

FLAGSTAFF, AZ — Flagstaff Unified School District officials worked over the weekend to try to resolve a cyber security issue that forced all schools to close …

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Armis wants to resolve the IoT security issue

The Internet of Things (IoT) is a big deal. A really big one.

There are approximately 8 billion connected devices on the market today, collectively accounting for 50 percent of internet traffic. And that is but a taste of the future—the number of devices is anticipated to increase 150 percent in the next three years. And where growth like that is predicted, every man and his dog is keen to grab market share. The security for IoT space is no different.

+ Also on Network World: A lack of IoT security is scaring the heck out of everybody +

There are some justified reasons why security in this new IoT context will be different. Connected devices (e.g., laptops, webcams, HVAC systems, etc.) are designed to connect wirelessly, without corporate oversight or control. This creates a dynamic, ever-expanding matrix of connections that not only boosts employee productivity and business efficiency, but simultaneously flies under the radar of security.

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