Cybersecurity

Your Password Is Terrible and Everyone Wants to Fix That

The death of the password has long been predicted. Amid many high-profile cyberattacks on some of the world's biggest companies, it looks like the end is finally near
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Headlines about mass data breaches have become ominously routine, and yet password convenience still trumps security for most people. That's why, year after year, the world's most popular log-on remains "123456," a password so obvious it accounted for 17 percent of the 10 million compromised passwords analyzed by Keeper Security, which sells a log-in management service.

The answer, of course, is to get rid of passwords altogether. Biometric technologyespecially fingerprint scannershas been steadily replacing the need to type in a password, which can easily be guessed by hackers wielding smart algorithms. Now, with the world increasingly embracing voice-activated devices like the Amazon Echo and Google Home, companies are starting to create technology that recognizes a person's speech patterns. Facial recognition is beginning to catch on as well.