Do any of your devices use these passwords? You could be at risk from hackers

midian182

Posts: 9,740   +121
Staff member
In a nutshell: We know people still use terrible passwords, and that’s a massive security risk. Companies are also at fault, with many using easily guessable default usernames and passwords in their devices—and hackers know it.

As a way of detecting patterns in cyberattacks, researchers from security company F-Secure set up a series of ‘honeypot’ decoy servers in countries around the world. Some of the most popular passwords that hackers tried appear in many worst passwords lists—“12345” and “password”—but “admin” proved most popular.

Another password used in many hacking attempts was “vivx,” which is a default for DVRs made by Chinese company Dahua. Two other passwords on the list— “1001chin” and “taZz@23495859”—are also factory defaults for other embedded devices, including routers.

It's revealed that 99.9 percent of traffic to the honeypots came from bots, malware, and other tools. These attacks can come from any connected device, from traditional PCs to smartwatches and even IoT toothbrushes.

Most of the attacks came from the US, followed by China and Russia. It’s noted, however, that many attackers route their attacks through proxies in other countries to avoid identification, so the list should be taken with a grain of salt. As for the top attack destinations, Ukraine was number one, followed by China, Austria, and the US.

When it comes to the top TCP ports targeted, SMB Port 445 was most popular with 526 million hits, showing that attackers are still keen to use SMB worms and exploits such as Eternal Blue, like Trickbot. Telnet was second with 523 million hits, indicating that attacks on IoT devices remain common.

The report is another reminder for consumers to change their devices’ default passwords and factory settings, and to follow standard safety precautions such as keeping up to date with the latest firmware updates and patches. Also, don't use terrible passwords.

Image credit: Vitalii Vodolazskyi via Shutterstock

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I got a Brilliant idea for your password...

Use your GPU or CPU name:

Example:

Corei9Extreme

Or: Corei9.Extreme when you need a special symbol.

Or: AMD5700

or: Nvidia2070Super
 
Oh great, now the computer users are trying to get their equipment nominated for the Darwin Awards .....
 
I got a Brilliant idea for your password...

Use your GPU or CPU name:

Example:

Corei9Extreme

Or: Corei9.Extreme when you need a special symbol.

Or: AMD5700

or: Nvidia2070Super

Not sure about that ...

But I work in IT so I can help people directly with their weak passwords. Just let me know the platform, your user name and current password, and I'll reset it to a completely secure one for you. Not a problem. ;)
 
Not sure about that ...

But I work in IT so I can help people directly with their weak passwords. Just let me know the platform, your user name and current password, and I'll reset it to a completely secure one for you. Not a problem.

GIUD's! Using Powershell -
Code:
[guid]::NewGuid().ToString()
= b306eb4f43244b0a967bed365a1827a3

Change some to cAmElcAppInG & symbols: 12 chars: RoQ^&3lqZkk#
Replace = b3Roq6E3bZ6^&33lq4b0a96A^kke18$#5x

Change passwords frequently. Turn ON 2FA everywhere, turn on Email notifications and check them. We can't make un-crackable passwords, we can make them consume more time.
 
Go to any website that tests passwords strength and test something as easy to remember as this one:

1Stupid.Chestnut.WIll.b.Orbital.or.Submerged

And yet people still use 12345......
 
One practice I have is to look around me and find twelve things that when I want to form a password, I can abbreviate it several ways.
 
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