Frontline Defense Against Hacking – Your Password

We all have an online presence. The internet is already a vital part of our everyday life and arguably, everyone nowadays is in one way or another, connected to the network. When you say “connected” it just seems synonymous with social media. With all the wonders of being connected, we also share in the increased risk that this entails. Hacking is an ever-present threat that looms on everyone with a social media account. The attraction comes from huge benefits to having control over accounts. The scary thing is that it applies to everyone, not just those that are famous. You see with control over any account, they can like, share, and follow everyone or any group that they want to influence. You see in the world of social media influencers, likes equals money. And not just pennies, mind you, it is a million-dollar global industry. It has become so lucrative AND commonplace that hackers now peddle their services in websites for anyone to use in hacking. The interesting part is that literally, even a child can use it. These among others include Instagram password hacker and all the other big social media sites have their equivalent too. There are some that you can do to your password so it will have a degree of protection from the moment you create it.

Password Management

Instagram hack

     Use a password manager, this creates strong and completely random passwords and have one master key across the different ones you create. This is nifty because rather than memorizing the long passwords you create, you will only need to memorize one. This is the one password that you need to focus on being as complex and as lengthy as possible. A tip would go for length rather than complexity. Once you get into 12-15 character and upwards, it becomes super hard for a hacker to guess or even brute force their way into your password. If you do not want to use a password manager, keep your special characters separated and do not use passwords across several accounts. That is just a recipe for disaster. One more thing – do NOT trust your browser to remember passwords for you. It is not safe. If you really must let a third party app do it for you.

Two Factor

     In these days, a password is not enough. Add an extra layer of security to your accounts by adding codes sent from a separate device that you own to access your account when accessing it from another location or another device. This is probably the single most effective way to drastically up your defense against hackers. Ultimately, being aware and being vigilant and responsible in your online activities will also add another layer of protection for your accounts.