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‘123456’ assumes the ‘worst password of 2013’ throne

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When will people learn? Between the Target and Adobe hacks, the tales of the renegade, chattering smart home appliances, and plain ol’ malware and viruses, you’d think people would smarten up and at least pick a password that couldn’t be cracked by a relatively disciplined and patient chimp.

 But noooooooo, people gotta fail and be all lazy. Case in point: SplashData, a firm that makes programs that manage passwords and more, revealed via an official blog post that ‘123456’ was the worst password of 2013, unseating ‘password’ from its throne and seizing its crown outright. The two traded places between 2013 and 2012, when ‘password’ held the top spot and ‘123456’ was the runner up.

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Honorable..actually, dishonorable mentions include ‘12345678,’ which maintains its hold on third place. The equally unimaginative ‘qwerty’ took fourth after finishing fifth the previous year, with ‘abc123’ rounding out the top five, proving that people either still listen to that Jackson 5 song, or that they’re extremely lazy and careless. Or both.

In light of the Adobe hack which occurred late last year, here’s what SplashData CEO Morgan Slain had to say about these pathetic excuses for passwords.

“Seeing passwords like ‘adobe123’ and ‘photoshop’ on this list offers a good reminder not to base your password on the name of the website or application you are accessing.” 

Yeah, no kidding. But guess what? There are indications that people are getting even more lazy when it comes to choosing passwords. On this, Slain said: “Another interesting aspect of this year’s list is that more short numerical passwords showed up even though websites are starting to enforce stronger password policies.” Some newcomers to the list that SplashData compiled on 2013 passwords include “1234”, “12345”, and “000000”. 

As more and more people do their banking, bill paying and buying online, it seems as if this problem will only get worse and worse.

What do you think? Sound off in the comments below.

Konrad Krawczyk
Former Computing Editor
Konrad covers desktops, laptops, tablets, sports tech and subjects in between for Digital Trends. Prior to joining DT, he…
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