The decades-long battle against bad passwords might be heading the wrong way in part because many users overestimate how savvy they are, per a recent survey by security firm CybSafe and the National Cybersecurity Alliance.
According to the report, many people have failed to put basic password hygiene into practice. For example, 40% of respondents said they use “single dictionary words or names” as passwords, while nearly as many (35%) include some degree of personal information. While 65% reported using unique passwords across important accounts, 18% of respondents said that was only the case half the time—and 17% reported using unique passwords a minority or none of the time.
While 54% of respondents said they had used a password manager—up 10% from the prior year’s edition of the survey—around 14% said they had given up using them. All told, 39% of the respondents said they just didn’t trust password managers.
Oz Alashe, CybSafe’s founder and CEO, said IT security teams need to do better at communicating not just the benefits of security tools but the mechanisms they use. For example, the survey found a widespread perception password managers do little to enhance security; 48% of respondents who had never used or abandoned them said they wouldn’t stop cybercriminals.
Keep reading here.—TM
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