The most common passwords in USA and Mexico are so weak that they could be hacked in seconds. It sounds like laughter, but a lot More people than you think use 123456 as the master password. And, year after year, the most used passwords remain more basic than a single multiplication table. A recent study from NordVPN put this reality on the table. The good news is that all is not lost and the solution is closer than you think, right in your pocket.
The Weakest Passwords of 2024
The study analyzed a database of 2.5 TB of data extracted from public sources and the “dark web”
The most used passwords in USA
- 123456
- 123456789
- 12345678
- USA
- qwerty123
- 12345
- qwert1
- 1234567890
- password
- 12345
The most used passwords in Mexico
- 123456
- 123456789
- qwerty123
- qwert1
- 12345678
- 12345
- password
- 1234567890
- 1234567
- qwerty
Using such basic passwords puts your security at risk. Especially because, if they type in your email, Social networks, bank accounts can kidnap yousubscriptions to applications or services. Seriously, this is a bigger problem than you think.
Passwords app is here to save you
This is where our faithful companion, the iPhone, puts on his superhero cape. The iOS 18 Passwords app suggests strong passwords and saves them. This way we will only have to use Face ID access to then automatically enter these passwords They can be as complicated as we want them to be. In fact, the iPhone itself suggests difficult passwords when we sign up in new places.
However, we had many services and emails before the Passwords app existed. This is why We recommend that you enter the “Security” section of said request. There you will find passwords that have been repeated a lot or have even appeared in leaks. In case there is a very serious alert, it is time to change it.
Yes, it’s very lazy and you feel like you’re wasting time changing every password, but in the future you can be very happy. Start with the most critical services
One last tip: Ñ is our secret weapon
And while we’re at it, why not take advantage of our linguistic advantage? As a cybersecurity expert recommends, including the letter “Ñ” in your passwords can make Hackers take up to four weeks to decrypt them. So now you know, stop using “password” as a password (unless it’s “password”). All joking aside, it’s best to let our iPhone help us with this digital security management. Our future selves will thank us.
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