The Province

And forget your cat’s name

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Somewhere in Western Australia, a government IT employee is probably laughing or crying or pulling their hair out, or maybe all of the above. A security audit of the Western Australian government released this week by the state’s auditor general found that 26% of its officials had weak, common passwords — including more than 5,000 including the word “password” out of 234,000 in 17 government agencies.

The legions of lazy passwords were exactly what you — or a thrilled hacker — would expect: 1,464 people went for “Password12­3” and 813 used “password1.” Nearly 200 individual­s simply used “password,” perhaps never changing it to begin with. Almost 13,000 used variations of the date and season, and almost 7,000 included versions of “123.”

The laxness might be amusing, but the potential consequenc­es definitely aren’t. Many of these accounts are used to access important informatio­n and vital government systems, according to the report — and several can do so remotely, with no further vetting or credential­s. Auditors were able to access one agency’s network, with full system administra­tor privileges, by guessing the password: “Summer123.” Overall, the report found most agencies didn’t help users store their informatio­n safely and securely.

Weak passwords are easy target for hackers. Last year, Verizon’s annual Data Breach Investigat­ions Report, which looked at hacking incidents at 65 companies, found that “81% of hacking-related breaches leveraged stolen and/or weak passwords.” This number has gone up from 50% in the past three years.

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