Thursday, September 24, 2015

Journal #2- With Pa$$w0rds Comes Anxiety?

 

            The TED Talk I chose for this assignment is titled “What’s Wrong with Your Pa$$w0rd?” by Lorrie Faith Cranor, a computer science and engineering professor at Carnegie Melon University.  Basically, this presentation is about the troubles people go through with having to choose and memorize such complicated passwords for so many different things so hackers have less of a chance of getting into personal accounts.  Lorrie shows her audience the research done at the university, including what the most effective and secure choice of password is that someone can use.  The best thing someone can do when creating a password, according to the statistics, is pick a longer word that is easily pronounceable, but not something used in a usual day to day conversation, or maybe not even a real word.  An example of this would be the word “tassawaki.”  A presentation like this may not always seem extremely exciting, but it was actually quite interesting.  It showed just how easy it can be for someone to hack a password and get any information needed.  Lorrie started out by talking about how many requirements there usually are for creating a password.  Most websites and companies ask for 8 characters, an uppercase letter, a lowercase letter, a digit, a symbol, and no more than 3 of any character.  This is something we can all relate to, especially as college students, because just having to create a password for our school emails requires most or all of those things.  Even the title of this presentation shows just how complicated a password can be.  I think the hardest thing for all of us is having to memorize so many different passwords because it seems like everything on the internet requires one now.  I’m sure that all of us can understand why passwords need to be so detailed, no matter how annoying, but until this TED Talk, I didn’t realize just how important it truly is to make them long or difficult because it is extremely easy for smart hackers to figure them out.              

2 comments:

  1. First of all I have to say that I love the picture you chose, Steve Carell is the best! This topic does sound really interesting, especially when it gets so in depth about password requirements. Overall I think you did a great job using examples and summarizing the presentation so it was easy to understand. I definitely am going to rethink my passwords more now!

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  2. I agree with you about passwords needing to be more complex. At the place I work at we have several passwords and they are required to have at least 8 letters, one capital letter, one digit, and one special character. You did a great job explaining the talk and giving examples.

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