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Improved Password Cracking – How Easily Are Yours Stolen?
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Improved Password Cracking – How Easily Are Yours Stolen?

May 1, 2025

New upgrades to technology have made password-cracking a breeze. As a result, creating fortified passwords is more important than ever. We know rock-solid passwords do wonders in keeping intruders out, yet few of us actually use them. New data shows just how quickly, or not, different passwords get cracked these days depending on how they’re built.

Research by Specops Software gets to the nitty-gritty of how password assembly creates a stunning difference in the “crack-ability” of the guardians to your online accounts. That difference in cracking times depends on the length and mix of characters used. All the following examples come from Specops Software’s research.

In an Instant or in Thousands of Years

Two passwords with the same length of characters have very different cracking times depending on how they’re made. A 12-character, numbers-only password is cracked in an instant. Whereas the same 12-character password with a mix of numbers, upper- and lower-case letters and symbols takes 26.5 thousand years to break. With that kind of time, even cybercriminals know it’s time to move on.

Research also shows short passwords (eight characters) with a mix of upper- and lower-case characters is toast within two minutes. The best result for a short password is one mixing all character types. Even then, cracking takes up to 3 hours maximum. Hackers with reason to believe an account is worth the effort will take the time to crack that password.

The Mother of All Passwords

For the password curious, there’s one that’s the stuff of legends. That is, one that’s twenty-two characters long with a mix of all character types. The end result takes 2 septillion years to crack, and no one has that kind of time. For comparison, the same length using numbers only needs 490 years to crack. Now that’s more reasonable.

What to learn from all these examples is a mix of all characters in a long password is the best way to go. Only then will password cracking be extremely difficult and time-consuming for cybercriminals. Like putting multiple locks on your bike or adding “The Club” to the steering wheel of your car, the idea is for them to give up and move on to easier targets; like the account with “123456” or “Football” as a password. Whether you’re that easier target is up to you.


How To Create A Strong And Unique  Password For Every Account

Education

How To Create A Strong And Unique Password For Every Account

Most of us know by now not to use the same passwords for different accounts; yet some of us still do. But users who continue to use passwords they know have been exposed in a hack are truly flirting with danger. In a recent study, Google found 1.5% of passwords are still being used despite those users knowing they’ve been compromised. A security researcher discovered more than 22 million unique passwords and over 770 million email addresses were made public on a popular hacker forum earlier this year. READ FULL STORY

Keeping Your Bank Account And Credit Cyber-Smart

Education

Keeping Your Bank Account And Credit Cyber-Smart

Financial institutions and hacking go hand-in-hand. Hacking banks and their account holders is the most direct cash infusion a hacker can get…and they know it. According to Kaspersky Lab, attacks on ATMs alone hit an all-time high in 2017 with malware-as-a-service (MAAS) opportunities. With this service, even hacking “hacks” who have no cybercrime experience can watch an instructional “how to” video on how to target an ATM successfully. Guarding our finances with common sense protection is something we all need to do. READ FULL STORY

Fake Update Ads Steal Your Passwords

Scams & Phishing

Fake Update Ads Steal Your Passwords

We know the cyber-cheats are always out there using every trick in the book to steal our money, identities and whatever else they can get their hands on. So, the next time you’re alerted to a software update, especially one appearing in an online ad, it’s time to step back and take a closer look before tapping “Download.” A latest malvertising campaign lures users into downloading a fake software update. The now custom, improved malware is being used at this very moment and surely will continue doing damage well into the new year. READ FULL STORY








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