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Your passwords - for your (fire-proof?!) safe and/or concealment

You MAY also want to keep a backup copy at another location in case of fire, theft or other disaster.

N.B. DO NOT PUT the whole of ANY SERIOUS PASSWORD (e.g. financial) on this list!

Even though the passwords below DO provide a stepping stone to stealing your identity and even money transfer / cash, a thief would normally be 'stopped at the door' by any SERIOUS financial institution (at least 50 employees dedicated to I.T. security). If you placed login details to any of those services below you would be 'giving away the keys' and almost certainly not protected by insurance or the indemnity of the service provider!

Common name of resource / password

Source and where to
change the user name / password IF possible

Usage - where,
when and how

User name (U:) and P:Password (P:)
- almost certain to be case sensitive

Danger
Level/
Source

Notes on usage or access

Broadband / Dial-up access

ISP given to allow Internet access

Used by router or modem when accessing Broadband - normally automatic

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*** Web

Even password is not usually changeable by you

Router

Router or ISP pre-set to allow changes to Broadband access

Used by you to configure router

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

***** Web

Essential to change if not unique to you

Wireless

May be pre-set by ISP to allow safe (Wireless) access to router

Used by router to allow or deny wireless access

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

****** Locality

Essential to change if not unique to you

Your PC (e.g. XP or Vista)

Set by you so remember well

Used by Windows when any user tries to access your PC

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

******
In-House/
Theft esp.
Laptop!

If your PC is networked a blank password is better than a poor one - see below for ease of hacking!

E-mail

Your primary e-mail service provider or ISP

Used by Outlook or Webmail to access mail

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

****** Web

Details are normally sent IN THE CLEAR (not secure!). Remember e-mail inc. password reminders etc.

E-mail

Any secondary e-mail service provider(s)

Used by Outlook or Webmail to access mail

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

**** Web

See above re: security. Note that a second mailbox CAN be useful to avoid Spam.

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

 

 

 

U: ____________________________
P: _______________

*

 

Detailed notes to the above

If anyone has physical access to your (XP) PC and your password is less than 15 characters long and only letters and numbers it can usually be 'cracked' in less than 20 minutes by booting from a downloadable CD. After viewing the user names and passwords they can re-boot the PC and simply login to any Windows account on the PC!

More guidance about the creation, storage and use of passwords

For the latest best practice on this topic visit: http://bb4t.co.uk/Page/bestppp but for now (May'09) consider:

Your passwords - making them memorable but safe and secure

The complexity surrounding the topic of passwords is something that no "normal" user should need to know although I have tried to articulate those issues in many web pages over many years - my conclusion is that I should write a short article (below) which tells readers WHAT they should DO and NOT WHY! I am also LIMITING my advice here to passwords for web sites rather then PCs, mobile 'phones, Laptops, Routers and other devices which could become physically accessible by thieves - see Passwords for insecure devices if that is also a matter that concerns you.

Consider what threats and in particular the source of them cause the greatest exposure - a physical thief, a youth with a 'hacking' laptop, a co-worker or an acquaintance; through to bored kids at college, hackers in Russia / China / Africa... They all have different 'attack vectors' - physically stealing a laptop, take over your PC or router (locally to begin with!) or simply scraping data, including user names and passwords, off a discarded computer hard drive.

  • The most important aspect of managing passwords is to treat them in categories according to their value or risk/consequences to you - the lowest level can be throwaway in almost all respects and that is that every level is distinct from all others and cannot act as a 'set of ladders' for a thief to ascend. If you use the same or similar passwords for banking as you do for small retail stores on the web then you have given the thief an escalator when you thought you were playing "Snakes and Ladders".
  • For simplicity, let's refer to them as levels as used in a computer game - Level 0 should be so basic and simple that anyone can play - Level 3 however has to become part of the game where NO-ONE can follow-you, no matter how well they know you - personally, historically, by observation/monitoring and no matter where they attack from or with what weapons.
  • Really good passwords need to withstand the variety of attacks that already exist (brute force, dictionaries, rainbow tables etc.) and ideally try to anticipate those that are not yet economic for the thief. However, passwords MUST be EASY ENOUGH! to remember in your head.
  • Writing OR just STORING the whole of a password down in one place IS NOT A GOOD IDEA for protecting resources which are high risk/consequences. For example - I would not use a single electronic or software safe to store the whole of a password for any financial (or other important) web site just as I would not store that in my wallet or mobile 'phone.

    That is why our conclusion is that the best building block is based on the first character of words in sentences as that is a very easy and natural way to replay a password, even if being asked for specific characters of it. The extra challenge is that the simplicity of this approach means that it is necessary to choose sentences:

    • where there is more than one (and unrelated!) sentence - if you need to make a record a reminder then record them separately and ideally on separate media / location - paper in your fire-safe at home combined with an obfuscated text on your mobile would be OK for a low-medium risk password. Add a third location (+ maybe media) for high risk passwords.
    • which very, very few people would know - obviously NOT lyrics, quotations etc.. Think laterally - a sentence could be WHAT you WANTED to SAY to your BOSS at the Christmas party LAST YEAR! Don't even THINK of using what you want to say to them THIS YEAR because it will have gone through your mind dozens of time before then and 'accidents do happen'
    • ideally each sentence would not exist anywhere on the Internet! However, when checking this (using "Google with quotes") you must not research more than one sentence at the same PC and certainly not in the same week as your search query strings are logged and it is just conceivable that a hacker could target this data as a source for a new dictionary!
  • To add some complexity AND length to the above you also need a SIMPE set of rules - ONE FOR EACH LEVEL and VERY DISTINCT which insert odd characters into the password and IDEALLY make them broadly unique to the web site you are visiting.

    But as stated above, for the latest best practice on this topic visit: http://bb4t.co.uk/Page/bestppp


This page © Business before Technology 2008-9 - see the respective sites of the owners for their copyright as well as terms and conditions

Links and other information last validated on 22nd May 2009. Please use the Contact us page to suggest any additions or revisions. Windows XP Remote Assistance now provides in-work training and assistance, as and when needed to more than a dozen customers


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