Google: Change Your Password Twice a Year to Keep Safe

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Change your passwords twice a year and never reuse them. Those are a few of the tips Google lists in an online security checklist that helps people stay one step ahead of the scammers.

With most Internet users now wary of spam messages, fraudsters have increasingly focused on popular Web services such as Gmail, Facebook, Yahoo, and Hotmail. They break into accounts and then send their messages to the victim's contacts, hoping that the spam will be more effective because it comes from a friend. "People are far more likely to respond to a message from someone they know," said Andrew Brandt, lead threat researcher with antivirus vendor Webroot, speaking via instant message.

The spam can include links to fraudulent pharmaceutical Web sites, phoney phishing pages, or pleas for money. In one scam that has been run for more than a year now, the criminal pretends that he's trapped in a foreign country and asks friends of his victim to wire him funds.

Victims usually don't know how their accounts were compromised, but according to Google there are several ways this can happen. User names and passwords are often stolen in phishing attacks, or via malicious software that records them as they are typed into the computer. Sometimes the criminals hack into Web sites that are linked to Google accounts. "If that site is hacked and your sign-in information is discovered, the hijacker has easy access to your Google Account,' wrote Priya Nayak, an online operations strategist with Google in a Friday blog posting.

And sometimes the bad guys simply guess right. "You use a password that's easy to guess, like your first or last name plus your birth date ('Laura1968'), or you provide an answer to a secret question that's common and therefore easy to guess, like 'pizza' for 'What is your favorite food?,'" Navak wrote.

Keeping your password changed, and using one that's hard to guess, can help thwart many of these techniques.

Webroot's Brandt said that Google's advice for twice-yearly changes is reasonable. He thinks people should change their passwords as often as they can. "I change my passwords at least four times a year, but I'm a security nerd and use password manager software which generates the passwords and reminds me to change them."

Brandt users a password manager that comes with Webroot's security software, but there are free options too. Keepass are two popular choices.

Even with password managers, it's a chore to keep on top of all the different log-in information that most people need to surf the Internet. But for important accounts, the work is worth it, according to Google.

"Online accounts that share passwords are like a line of dominoes," Nayak wrote. "When one falls, it doesn't take much for the others to fall, too. This is why you should choose unique passwords for important accounts like Gmail (your Google Account), your bank, commerce sites, and social networking sites."

Released last week, Google's checklist includes 18 basic security tips that everyone using the Internet should know.

Robert McMillan covers computer security and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Robert on Twitter at @bobmcmillan. Robert's e-mail address is robert_mcmillan@idg.com

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6 Comments

  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Edward Mon Oct 18, 2010 05:17 am PDT Report Abuse
    GregoryH said-

    "that person *deserves* to have their machine hacked to pieces...as a reward for their stupidity."

    No one "deserves" to be hacked. That's like saying someone walking at night "deserves" to be raped or mugged. Instead of blaming the victim, blame the lowlife who is the real cause of the crime. The average hacker knows a hell of a lot more about computers and software than the average computer user. You can't blame people for not knowing about every method hackers use. Doing so just points to your ignorance, not theirs.
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 1 users disliked this comment
    GregoryH Sun Oct 17, 2010 08:03 am PDT Report Abuse
    re: "They break into accounts and then send their messages to the victim's contacts, hoping that the spam will be more effective because it comes from a friend."

    If one can not tell that such a message is really *not* from a friend (by the grammar, punctuation, diction, vocabulary, etc.) then that person *deserves* to have their machine hacked to pieces...as a reward for their stupidity.
  • 4 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 1 users disliked this comment
    Herbert Sat Oct 16, 2010 06:46 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Google forgot to add that you should let Google record your passwords too, so its easier for them to access your stuff. Just in case they need to give it to the Government in a hurry.
  • 2 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    JM Sat Oct 16, 2010 10:59 am PDT Report Abuse
    Changing often does no good if people are unable to remember them and wind up writing passwords down. At a place I worked at, people were assigned passwords with random numbers and letters. Real secure. They wrote them down on post-it notes. haha

    Websites should allow/mandate that users includes special characters in their passwords. That would be much harder to brute force.

    If they allow only lowercase and numbers: 36 options for a character
    Add upper case: 62 options
    Add symbols/punctuation: 94 options
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
    ogo Fri Oct 15, 2010 05:13 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Just let Jesus protect you.
  • 1 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    My name Fri Oct 15, 2010 04:09 pm PDT Report Abuse
    I don't see how that can make it safe. If people wanted to break into your account by trying different password, they can do that attempt in a day, don't have to wait for six months. The more frequent changing the pasword will make it less secure -- since you don't always remember all the passwords in your gmail account, bank online accounts, shopping site accounts. It is safer to use different password for each different site requiring login. But keep changing password do you no benefit.

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