How Can You Better Keep Your Data Safe?
Experts Report: Louis McHugh, Adjunct Associate Industry Professor of Information Technology and Management
TRANSCRIPT
To me the bottom line with these data breaches is twofold. One: The biggest vulnerability is ourselves, unfortunately. We make bad passwords, we write our passwords down, we make weak passwords. And until all these websites that we access and such enforce strong password integrity rules, youāre going to continue to see these breaches. But on the other side I think thereās a responsibility of those companies to do their due diligence to actually report that thereās been a data breach, not wait three months, six months down the road, as we saw what a number of companies here in 2017 and even here into 2018. We hear months later that our passwords have been breached.
Thereās a number of different areas that they have to look at. Itās not just the handheld device, your laptop, you also have to think of your social media presence and what youāre sharing online. And in everything Iāve seen, unfortunately, most folks share way too much information.
What do I mean by sharing too much information? Those little quizzes that folks will send you, you know āshare this informationāāwhat is your motherās maiden name, what is your fatherās first name? Well, if you really think about it, what are those really asking? Those are password reset questions. So if somebody is able to get your email address along with a list of those types of questions, they can access your account and brute force your account and gain access to your email by resetting your password.
Iām not a fan of storing them physically on a computer, like when you use a browser like Firefox, Chrome, IE, it will say, āsave your password.ā Iām not a fan of saving them in the browser because theyāre not encrypted. A password-managing tool like LastPass and KeePass actually encrypts the password, so if somebody was to steal your laptop they actually cannot gain access to all your accounts.