Tag Archive for: characters

Jasson Casey, Beyond Identity: “malware doesn’t care if your password is four characters or four thousand characters long”


The increasing reliance on using the internet has businesses, governments, and individuals more aware of data security and identity protection. One of the primary concerns is password protection.

No matter how secure your passwords are, cybercriminals with the right malware will find a way to steal them. Even the leading VPN might be insufficient for full data protection and online security. Cybercriminals have access to the same advancing technology and software apps that the rest of the public does. That access resulted in an increase in cyberattacks by stealing passwords. Avoiding these risks means taking the time to learn more about preventative measures.

To discuss the issue in more detail, we spoke with Jasson Casey, the CTO at Beyond Identity – cybersecurity company advancing toward Zero Trust Authentication through constant risk assessment and continuous security validations.

How did Beyond Identity originate? What has the journey been like?

Two and a half decades ago, our founders – Jim Clark and Tom Jermoluk, made the World Wide Web accessible to all. They made it ready for business. Jim spearheaded the release of the Netscape browser along with SSL for secure Internet transactions. Tom focused on large-scale home broadband access with @Home Network. As businesses, governments, and individuals increasingly relied on the Internet, so too did bad actors. Bad actors eroded trust, stole intellectual property, and pilfered funds.

There are hundreds of billions of passwords in the world today. Yet, we continue to rely on this fundamentally insecure authentication model. Passwords are insecure because these “shared secrets” transit networks get stored in unprotected databases. They are also shared among friends and family. Ultimately, they’re reused across multiple apps. With the creation of Beyond Identity, the SaaS platform goes above and beyond FIDO standards. Our passwordless, invisible MFA supports broad authentication use cases. It turns all devices (including computers, tablets, and phones) into secure authenticators. Our platform validates the user and verifies the device is authorized. It checks the security posture of the device and executes an…

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I’m a cyber security expert – why your password should be at least 11 characters


A CYBER security expert has revealed the real reason your password should be 11 characters long.

Kaitlin says that hackers are constantly evolving their tactics, making it easier than ever to crack codes.

Katlin said passwords are becoming easier to guess for hackers

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Katlin said passwords are becoming easier to guess for hackersCredit: TikTok/cybersecuritygirl
The TikToker recommends using 11 letter passwords - claiming it takes hackers 41 years to crack

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The TikToker recommends using 11 letter passwords – claiming it takes hackers 41 years to crackCredit: TikTok/cybersecuritygirl

Speaking on TikTok, @cybersecuritygirl said her top tip for all online users is to have a good password.  

This is because six-letter and seven character password can be guessed in as little as one second.  

While an eight letter password can be predicted in little over an hour.

And if that didn’t scare you, then Katlin revealed that a nine-letter password can be guessed in just three days – potentially leaving your online security exposed.

As of result, the TikToker recommends that you have a password that contains 11 characters.

She said your password should contain letters, characters, symbols and should exclude no known words and names.

She added that such a combination could potentially take a hacker roughly 41 hours to crack – rendering it virtually impossible to solve.

It comes after experts warned that millions of people might be at risk of having their private data stolen because of weak computer passwords.

The survey from Uswitch.com said one of the biggest missteps people make is the simple act of writing their passwords down by hand on paper, Express reported.

Uswitch advises people to never put their passwords down, whether it’s on a piece of paper or stored in an email on your computer.

Another common mistake people make is using common phrases or patterns like ‘12345’ or ‘qwerty.’ 

These types of codes are likely to be some of the first combinations a digital intruder might try when trying to access your digital world.

If you want to keep your accounts safe from hackers, another error that experts say you should avoid is incorporating personal information.

Instead you should find ways to turn information or a phrase you will remember, into a code.

An example of this, provided by Express, is: T3rRy550c1alMed!Ac1234 (Terrys…

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Console Exclusive Games Have Given Way To Console Exclusive Game Characters

Editor’s Note: Originally, this article was set to run before the article of Crystal Dynamics defending this decision… but somehow that didn’t happen. You can read that article here if you like, or if you haven’t already, you can read this one first, and recognize that time has no meaning any more, so the linear publishing of articles is no longer necessary… or maybe Mike just screwed things up. One of those.

For anything that isn’t first-party content, I will never understand why games sell as console exclusives. Maybe there is math out there that makes having a game publisher limit itself to one sliver of the potential market make sense, but somehow I have a hard time believing it. That’s all the more the case given that the recent trend has been less exclusivity, rather than more. While the PC market is now seeing platform exclusivity emerge, something which makes even less sense than with consoles, game franchises that were once jealously guarded exclusives, such as MLB The Show, are announcing opening up to more systems, including PCs.

But it seems the instinct to carve out something exclusive for your system is hard to shake. Or, that’s at least the case for Sony, which has managed to retain exclusive rights for the character Spider-Man in the upcoming Marvel’s Avengers game.

In a move already being roundly criticized on social media, Crystal Dynamics’ Jeff Adams revealed today that Spider-Man will be available as a free update for PlayStation players of this September’s Marvel’s Avengers game in “early 2021.” PC and Xbox One players, apparently, won’t get to play as him.

Adams announced the move in a PlayStation blog post, offering no insight as to why PC and Xbox players would miss out and outlining no exclusive content for those games. It doesn’t appear to be a timed exclusive. When Kotaku reached out to Square Enix, the game’s publisher, for comment, about that and the rest of the deal, we were directed to Adams’ blog post—which didn’t answer any of our questions.

Now, there is some complicated licensing potentially at issue here. While Disney owns the rights to The Avengers generally, Sony has retained many of the publishing rights for the Spider-Man character. In 2018, the excellent Spider-Man video game came out as a PlayStation and many assumed that Sony had the sole game publishing rights to the character. But that doesn’t seem to be true, no matter what noises Sony’s made in the past. Instead, these rights still seem to reside with Marvel, which has tended to lean towards the PlayStation. But, as the Kotaku article points out, it’s not as though Spider-Man has never made an appearance on other systems. He’s been in Nintendo games, along with other games, such as Marvel’s Lego series of games.

The idea behind these exclusive deals, be it for entire game franchises or for characters like Spider-Man, is to try to engender some kind of loyalty among the fan-base by having this exclusive content. And perhaps at one point that worked. But these days, the only thing Sony seems to be getting for its trouble is backlash. And when Forbes is out here saying that this character exclusive isn’t just bad for the other platforms the game will appear on, but bad for PlayStation players as well, then maybe it’s time to rethink this whole thing.

The problem with exclusives is that they not only hurt the obvious suspects, the platforms that are not getting X or Y exclusive, which in this case is Xbox and PC players, but they even hurt the platform that’s supposed to benefit from them.

With Avengers, it’s easy to see how this could play out in a similar fashion. While the main storyline of Avengers seems to be playing out around six launch heroes, Black Widow, Hulk, Thor, Captain America, Iron Man and Ms. Marvel, the entire point of the game is that it will be an ongoing story that unfolds in time. It’s easy to see how a character like Spider-Man, a prominent Avenger in both the MCU and the comics, could have been integrated into a major storyline at some point in the future as the game expands. But the fact that he’s exclusive to PlayStation essentially insures that he cannot be a major player in the story, relegated to some sort of introductory side mission, and that’s it, or as a tag-along to other missions without a major active role.

So why do this at all? Because old habits are hard to shake, probably. And, frankly, Sony’s gonna Sony. But that doesn’t make any of this less dumb, less bad for the gaming community, or less bad for even those who will get this exclusive character.

Techdirt.

Find out who is leaking your secrets, with help from invisible zero-width characters

Find out who is leaking your secrets, with help from invisible zero-width characters

Even the shortest section of text can contain a hidden “fingerprint” that could identify the source who has leaked the information.

Read more in my article on the Tripwire State of Security blog.

Graham Cluley