Advice from a Real Hacker How to Create Stronger Passwords
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
People who know that I am a professional hacker
often ask me what they can do to make their computers and personal
information safe from people like me. The answer, of course, is that
nothing will make you completely safe, but there are a number of
measures any computer user can take to reduce the chances of being a
victim of a hacker.
Why You Should Be Choosing Stronger Passwords
As
your password secures all of the resources on your system, including
your email and other important online accounts (banking, brokerage,
etc.), it's critical to choose a strong password that makes my job more
difficult. Understand that there is NO password that I can't break given
enough time and CPU cycles, but like anything else, I'll attack the
low-hanging fruit first.
Let's
begin by saying that hackers like me don't simply try to guess your
password at your login screen. That would be impractical. Most login
screens lock an attacker out after three incorrect attempts. I want to
be able to try millions or billions of attempts.
What attackers will do is steal the storage
of the passwords on a vulnerable system. These passwords are encrypted
in the form of a hash, but once I have these hashes, which I can grab
using tools like Pwdump, Airodump-Ng and the Meterpreter, I can take as much time as I need to crack your password.
The Best Way to Make Your Password Less Appetizing
Ideally,
you should choose a random set of characters that is the maximum length
that your account or system will accept. The fundamental rule of password cracking is that the longer the password, the longer is takes to crack. Then, change the password often, about every thirty days or so.
I
think it goes without saying that this ideal scenario is not a
realistic scenario for most people. Given that, let's look at how you
can better protect your system and accounts from hackers like me. Here
is some advice on how to make my job as difficult as possible, while
remaining practical.
Step 1Never Use Dictionary Words
Even
a hacker with a minimal skill set can easily crack passwords that are
found in the dictionary. You might think that your word or words are
rather unique and obscure, but it doesn't take me very long to test
every word and word combination in the dictionary. NEVER use a
dictionary word!
Image via Shutterstock Even if you add numbers and special characters, hacking tools like Crunch will let me create custom wordlists, and tools like Hashcat, Brutus, Cain and Abel, THC Hydra, John the Ripper, Ophcrack, and L0phtCrack, as well as Aircrack-Ng and Cowpatty for Wi-Fi, will help me crack the password using my wordlists.
Using L0phtCrack to crack passwords. Image via L0phtcrack
Step 2Use All of the Allowable Character Types
Password cracking that tries all possibilities is called brute-force password cracking. It simply tries every possible combination of characters until it finds your particular password.
It
can require much time and computing resources to do so, but with recent
developments in parallel processing, specialized password-cracking
ASICs, and the use of botnets and GPUs, brute-force password cracking has made some giant leaps toward making even long, complex passwords more feasible to crack.
(1) Bitfury boards by Black Arrow, (2) Butterfly Labs processor, (3) Inside the Butterfly Labs Monarch. Images via Bitcoin Talk, CoinDesk, Gizmodo As
you might guess, brute-force password cracking is capable of eventually
cracking any and all passwords, but the keyword here is "eventually."
To protect yourself, you want to force the hacker to take long enough
that they will give up and crack your colleague's or neighbor's easier
password before they crack yours.
To
slow the hacker down, make certain that use at least one of every
character type in creating your password. This means using at least one
lowercase, one uppercase, one number, and one special character. This
will force the hacker to include all of these characters into their
brute-force cracking character set, thereby forcing them to take much,
much longer to crack your password.
To demonstrate, the amount of
combinations that are possible with an all lowercase, 8-character
password is 26 raised to the 8th power, or 208 billion. Albeit, that is a
big number, but it is certainly possible for the hacker to run through
that many possibilities in short order.
If you use lowercase,
uppercase, digits (0-9), and special characters, the number of
possibilities that the hacker must try is 75 raised to the 8th power, or
1,001,129,150,390,625. That's 1 quadrillion possibilities! This
translates into about 5,000-fold increase in the number of possibilities
the hacker must try.
To
think of it another way, if the first password (8 characters, all
lowercase) took 1 hour to crack, the second one would take 5,000 hours,
or 208 days. That may be enough to frustrate the hacker.
Step 3Never Use Just Numbers
NEVER use a numeric password without any letters or special characters. You are making things way too easy for me!
Never just use your number pad. NEVER. Image via Shutterstock Since
there are only 10 digits (0-9) in our base 10 number system, even a
numbered password with 10 characters only amounts to 9,999,999,999
possibilities to brute force. Compare that to the 8-character all
lowercase password above, and it would be 20 times easier to crack your
10-digit password than the 8-character lowercase one.
That's simply child's play! Give me more of a challenge than that!
Step 4Change Your Password Often
It's
important to change your password often. "Often" is a relative term and
it will depend upon the value of the information being secured by the
password. If it is an email or online bank account, you might want to
change your password every three months. Other passwords, such as your
accounts on non-financial websites, once every six months or year is
probably sufficient.
The reason you need to change your passwords
periodically is that hackers like me are always gathering passwords from
accounts all over the world. We may not use them immediately, or we may
sell them to someone who hasn't done anything with it yet. Your
password may be compromised and you don't even know it yet.
By
changing it periodically, you significantly reduce the chances of
someone like me compromising your account, even if the website/domain
has been hacked.
Step 5Use Different Passwords on Different Accounts
Your
passwords are stored all over the world in various accounts, websites,
domains, etc. If you use the same password on all of your accounts, your
information is only as secure as the weakest system storing your
password.
Imagine a case where you find a website or a game online
that you think is fun and entertaining. They ask you to create an
account and a password. This might be a new company or a big company,
but if they don't secure their systems adequately, someone will hack
their system and steal yours and all of the other accounts' passwords.
As
a hacker, I may not have any interest in your account on that website,
but I will try it on your bank account, credit card account, email
account, brokerage account, and so forth. If they are all the same, I
have struck GOLD!
The rule here is to use different passwords on
different types of accounts. You might create one password for all of
your highly confidential accounts, and one password for all the other
accounts. That way, if that online game site gets hacked, I can't take
that password and get into your bank account.
Step 6Create a Passphrase
Probably,
the method that will frustrate hackers like me the most, is to develop a
passphrase that is long and includes no words and all of the available
character types.
I
have seen many articles online that advise folks on how to create
passphrases and I simply laugh at them because I know that their advice
will simply create a passphrase that is still easy for me to crack.
Things like adding a date and month after a word, reversing the order of
dictionary words, and so on just beg to be cracked in short order.
Here is what will make my job most difficult.
First,
create a phrase or sentence that is meaningful to you. In this way, it
will be easy to remember. For instance, "I love mountain biking and
hiking." Now, take that phrase and convert it into single string of
uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and special characters, like this one:
"I<3mtnb1K1ng&H1k1ng" may not be an impossible passphrase to crack, but it's definitely harder. Image via Shutterstock Note that I have converted "love" to <3, "mountain" to mtn, "biking" to b1K1ng, "and" to &, and finally, "hiking" to H1k1ng.
It is critical to intersperse special characters and numbers into the
passphrase as well as use both upper- and lowercase letters.
This
creates an 18-character passphrase that uses uppercase, lowercase,
special characters, and numbers that, although not unbreakable, would
make someone like me invest significant time and computing resources to
crack it.
Most importantly, because it has special significance to
you, you will remember it. Obviously, this is key. No matter how
complex, passwords or passphrases that you can't remember defeat the
whole purpose.
That's
because people often write down passwords they can't remember and
hackers like me will often find your passwords on a sticky note near
your desk. Usually in the top drawer, under the keyword, stuck to
monitor... you get the picture.
Now, How Do You Feel About Your Passwords?
I
hope this advice makes my job as difficult as possible to crack YOUR
passwords, but thankfully, so many people won't take this advice that I
know there will always plenty of easy pickings among your neighbors and
colleagues.
And trust me, I have many ways to crack your password. Just check out my password cracking series or my Wi-Fi hacking series to get an idea.
Comments
Post a Comment