Bearhouse shares a new study from the UK’s “National Cyber Security Centre,” which advises the public on computer security, about the world’s most-frequently cracked passwords.

It’s probably no surprise to the Slashdot readership: people use bad passwords. A recent study of publicly-available “hacked” accounts — by the UK National Cyber Security Centre — reveals “123456” was top, followed by the much more secure “123456789” and hard-to-guess “qwerty”. If you’re a soccer (football) fan, then try “Liverpool” or “Chelsea” — they’ll work in more than half a million cases. Finally, for musicians, Metallica gets beaten down by 50cent, 140k to 190k respectively.

The most common fictional names used as passwords were “superman” (333,139 users), “naruto” (242,749), “tigger” (237,290), “pokemon” (226,947), and “batman” (203,116).
The organization recommends instead choosing three random words as a password — and also checking “password blacklists” that show passwords that have already been found in past data breaches. (Developers and sysadmins are also advised to implement these checks as part of their rules for which user passwords will be allowed.) The organization also released a file from the “Have I Been Pwned” site containing the top 100,000 passwords.

So what are the top ten most-frequently used passwords?

123456123456789qwertypassword11111112345678abc1231234567password112345

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Source:: Slashdot