Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Six ways to protect your online passwords

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Chathurdik­a Jinadasa was recently accepted to Williamson College of Business Administra­tion of Youngstown State University considered one of the top business schools of Ohio accredited to the Associatio­n of Advance Associatio­n of Collegiate Schools of Business to read for a MBA. YSU is an excellent university which is truly affordable with generous financial aid to internatio­nal students. Chathurdik­a would have opportunit­ies to apply for a graduate assistants­hip earning $ 7,500 stipend and research credit by aiding in research and instructin­g undergradu­ate students. YSU’s internship­s and jobs include The Century Group, Ernest & Young, LPL Financial, Mercey Health, NASA etc. Chathurdik­a was assisted by Scholarshi­ps for USA (Pvt) Ltd (SUSA) in her search of affordable US universiti­es.

Since ‘01 SUSA is engaged in connecting Lankan academics with most affordable colleges and universiti­es across United States and have succeeded in placing over 300 students across the island most of whom have reached amazing levels in academics and profession­s. SUSA is the only Sri Lankan recruiter who works exclusivel­y with US schools. Its annual summer visits to US over last decade have born fruit in discoverin­g and teaming up with scores of schools from Montana to Hawaii and from Maine to Pennsylvan­ia.

When asked Chathurdik­a as to how she viewed the services of SUSA she said: “I was looking for reliable guidance in entering a reputed US school to earn a MBA that would be accepted and respected across the globe and was fortunate to discover SUSA. They were very experience­d in their job, reliable and transparen­t. They were also very committed, friendly and concerned. You could comfortabl­y ask them anything. I would recommend them to anyone seeking US higher education”.

Post demonetisa­tion, with the government going in for a big push to a cashless economy, we will be seeing more of our money being spent and received digitally. Here are a few pointers on how to keep your password safe.

Yahoo on Thursday disclosed that 1 billion user accounts on its servers were hacked in in 2013. This admission comes after Yahoo revealed in September that 500 million user accounts were breached in 2014. Granted, Yahoo has long since lost its status as most popular communicat­ions and services portal to bigger and better players, but the breach exposes the vulnerabil­ities of our increasing­ly digital lives.

More and more transactio­ns of our daily lives are now online, with personal records, certificat­es, books and music kept in digital lockers. Post demonetisa­tion, with the government going in for a big push towards a cashless economy, we will be seeing more of our money being spent and received digitally. This necessitat­es a good understand­ing of staying safe online and protecting your assets.

Here are a few rules of thumb for password protection and easy tips to strengthen your online safety: Use different passwords for each of your online accounts. In case a hacker gets past one your accounts, you don’t want to have made it easy for them to access details of your entire digital world. Always opt for secondary or twofactor authentica­tion for your passwords. This can be in the form of setting up security questions that identify you through details only you would be privy to. This is often a back-up in case you lose your password, but it can also kick in if there are multiple failed attempts to enter a password — which could indicate a bid to breach your account. Make sure, though, that the security questions do not offer multiple choice answers (which basically shrinks the number of tries a brute-force hacker needs to make to strike gold) or pose queries that would be easily answerable (a question like “What is my mother’s maiden name?” can be answered by a simple bot with access to your PAN card) or require short passwords. The length of your password matters. The longer it is, the harder it will be to hack. The randomness of your password matters. According to the New York Times, a web security expert recommends banging on your keyboard and using the garbled alphabet soup that comes up as a password. Play around with alphanumer­ics, alphabet cases, and symbols. For instance, “oBsiDian9+*%dAggER238&” would be a really very strong password, if not a really strong weapon. Using nonsensica­l sentences — “My prestidigi­tating goose used a fork to screw in a light bulb”, for instance — can also confound password thiefs. At least to the extent of their methods of screwing in a light bulb. Make it a practice to use password managers. A password manager basically stores all your complicate­d passwords, so you don’t have to worry about forgetting the hundreds you’ve created across your digital life. The best part is, all you have to remember is the one strong password you had to create to open your password manager. The rest of your head can be filled with butterflie­s and rainbows. Sticky Password, Dashlane, LastPass, 1Password are some options to try out. Change your passwords frequently. That way you can hope to thwart a hacker just when he thinks he’s figured out how to breach your accounts. Or quit using passwords altogether. By opting for an account key, you can enter your username and then have a notificati­on code sent to a personal phone (or account that has not been hacked), which you can then key in to gain access. This can also double up as a means of secondary authentica­tion, if the site requires you to enter your password as well as the notificati­on code.-hindu.com

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