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Stop Using Passwords on Windows Networks!
Passwords have proven to be entirely too easy to crack or guess. In a new blog post by Microsoft PSS Security Incident Response Team, Robert Hensing shows us why passwords offer flimsy at best protection from hackers and how pass phrases are easier to remember and significantly more secure. - you should NOT be using passwords of any kind. Why? For starters, passwords are ridiculously easy to guess or crack. Worms like Agobot / Phatbot / Polybot / SDBot / RBot (no I didn't write this one) all ship with dictionaries of passwords numbering in the hundreds and they can easily replicate to a system that has a password in this word list, and the miscreants are really good at keeping these wordlists up to date with passwords that they've cracked from other systems. Hackers have armed themselves with worms, packet sniffers, and hash reversing websites in an effort to crack common, and even uncommon passwords. Microsoft operating systems have since Windows 2000 been able to handle longer pass phrases of up to 127 characters. What's more, pass phrases meet all of the usual complexity requirements and are often much easier to remember.
Read the entire Featured Blog Why You Shouldn't Be Using Passwords on Windows Networks.
Editors Note: While this blog isn't exactly new, it is definitely newsworthy.
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