Your password is definitely going to get stolen so please do this to protect yourself
In the last month, some high-profile individuals have been saying some pretty weird things online. Black Lives Matter activist Deray Mckesson endorsed Donald Trump on Twitter. Kylie Jenner announced on Twitter that she wanted an intimate part of Justin Bieber’s anatomy. Katy Perry tweeted a desire to end her long-time feud with Taylor Swift. And Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg proudly tweeted that he’d been hacked.
The tweets were out of character because they came from hackers who had taken over their accounts. Thanks to the recent leaks of millions of LinkedIn and Twitter passwords, hackers have been wreaking havoc on the accounts of people with massive followings. In some cases, they’re managing to break into celebs’ other online accounts because they’ve reused the same password. Zuckerberg, who had his Twitter and Pinterest accounts hacked, was allegedly using the idiotically simple “dadada” as his password across multiple accounts. That’s #DumbDumbDumb.
We’ve all been trained to live with the constant fear of the possibility of being hacked. Given how often hackers manage to raid companies’ servers and get their hands on files of passwords, it’s highly likely that at least one of your passwords is sitting on a hacker’s computer. If the company had good security practices and if you’ve practiced good password hygiene, it’s a long, complicated one that the hacker will be unlikely to decode. But if the company didn’t have good security practices, meaning passwords weren’t strongly hashed, or if the hackers got the passwords directly from users by putting malware on their computers, as reportedly happened with the Twitter passwords, then the hacker knows exactly what your password is.
That’s not good! Especially if you have the terrible habit of using the same password across multiple accounts. (Learn a lesson from the Zuck! Don’t do that! Use a password manager so that you can easily set up complex passwords for multiple sites.) But good news! There is something you can do that will go a long way towards protecting you even if a hacker does know exactly what your password is: two-factor authentication.