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🔢If your password is in this list, you’re an easy hacking target

None of the most common passwords included any symbols or special characters.

Protect yourself: Effective passwords necessary to keep your devices safe from hackers

Have you ever used “123456″ as a password for one of your online accounts? You might as well not have any password at all.

Today, cybercriminals are obtaining more stolen usernames and passwords than ever before. In fact, 2021 was a record year for data breaches. Almost 190 million people were victims in roughly 1,800 data breaches last year, according to the latest annual report from the Identity Theft Resource Center. Unsure if your credentials have ever been exposed in one of the latest data breaches? This website provides a free tool that tells you which of your accounts have been compromised, and all you need to do is enter your email address.

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Twingate analyzed a list of the 200 most common passwords in 2020, compiled by SecLists—a project maintained by Daniel Miessler, Jason Haddix, and g0tmi1k. The passwords were compiled from popular lists in the security testing world.

A sizable number of the most common passwords contained nouns and many included proper nouns like names of people (Nicole, Matthew) and intellectual properties (Pokémon, Star Wars), as well as regular nouns (princess, monkey, baseball). If the password contained at least three consecutive characters that are adjacent on a standard U.S. keyboard (qwerty, 1234, 159753) they were counted as having a keyboard pattern. None of the most common passwords analyzed by Twingate included any symbols or special characters.

Increasingly, bad actors can access wide swaths of Americans’ private information by performing what’s known as “credential stuffing.” Credential stuffing happens when cybercriminals buy or reuse lists of commonly used and stolen passwords and stuff them into the login fields of websites.

Credential stuffing poses a considerable risk to both businesses and consumers because of the sheer number of Americans who reuse passwords for multiple accounts. Around 65% of U.S. adults admitted to using the same passwords across at least some—if not all—websites they use, according to a 2018 Google survey conducted by The Harris Poll.

Tech companies including Apple are developing technology that experts say could be more secure and convenient than traditional passwords. They rely on your biometric data, meaning fingerprints and facial recognition.

Until more secure measures are implemented, password managers like 1Password or LastPass are an effective way to prevent these types of attacks, but passphrases are another good alternative. A passphrase is essentially a sentence. The FBI recommends using passphrases because longer passwords take longer for criminals to crack than complex ones (for example, those that include numbers and special characters).

Scrap of paper with a crossed out password and a new one on top of a keyboard.
Canva

The most common passwords use only letters or numbers

- Passwords containing only letters: 90 (45% of top 200 passwords)
- Only numbers: 56 (28%)
- Both letters and numbers: 54 (27%)

A woman logging into her computer with a password.
Thomas Andreas // Shutterstock

Many of the most common passwords contain nouns

- Passwords containing nouns: 79 (40% of top 200 passwords)

Man in a suit typing on a keyboard.
Prostock-studio // Shutterstock

Keyboard patterns were another common trend

- Passwords containing keyboard patterns: 77 (39% of top 200 passwords)

Keyboard with a list of passwords on the side.
Waniza // Shutterstock

While less common, multiple passwords contained the word "password"

- Passwords containing "password": 4 (2% of top 200 passwords)

Young man logging into computer in office.
fizkes // Shutterstock

If your password is in this list, you're an easy hacking target

- 123456
- 123456789
- picture1
- password
- 12345678
- 111111
- 123123
- 12345
- 1234567890
- senha
- 1234567
- qwerty
- abc123
- Million2
- 000000
- 1234
- iloveyou
- aaron431
- password1
- qqww1122

This story originally appeared on Twingate and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.