Securing your Email is IMPORTANT!!


Recommended Posts

When it comes to securing your online accounts with a strong password and two-factor authentication, one of the most IMPORTANT online accounts to secure is your email.

 

When a password is forgotten on a website, the password reset link is usually sent to your email (or a code is sent to your phone if you have two-factor authentication turned on). If someone got a hold of your email password, they could go to sites around the internet, resetting your website passwords (by having reset links sent to your email account which they now have access to) giving them complete access.

 

In the case of Gmail (which is a google account), it may be used to sync your chrome browser. If someone gets access to it, they also get access to any saved passwords saved inside chrome for other websites.

 

Your email is 1 password you DO NOT want to reuse! When creating a password, NEVER use a word found in the dictionary all by itself. Pad it with something, add some punctuation. For instance, take the word microscope. That word used by itself is a HORRIBLE password, but padding it with more characters makes it dramatically more secure. Let’s put a date and some punctuation on the end of it. Now we have microscope1954*!# This is a MUCH stronger password.

 

Strong, secure password are hard to remember, I get that. So don’t feel bad about writing your passwords down, in fact I highly encourage it! I’m much less concerned about someone breaking into your house steeling your book of passwords, than I am about someone hacking your email account because you reused / used a weak password.

 

Online services such as Gmail, Outlook and Yahoo typically won’t let you use a horrible password without adding a capital letter and some numbers (but they will obviously let you reuse one). 

 

Most email providers also support two-factor authentication. When enabled, you must provide a second factor of authentication when logging into your online account after providing the correct password.

 

The two types of Two-factor for your email are typically

 

SMS : A SMS message (Text message) is texted to your phone with a one time use code - This is the least secure two-factor method, but it is still more secure with it than without it.

 

Authenticator: Once enable you scan a provided QR code into an authenticator phone/tablet app of your choosing (Example, Google Authenticator or the Microsoft Authenticator) with your camera and the app will then generate a 1 time code every 30 seconds. 

 

If you use the Authenticator method I recommend saving the QR code that you initially scan into the authenticator, so you can scan that same QR again into the same phone (should you have to reset it) or in to a new phone (should something happen to your current one).

 

Two-factor codes are typically required when the email site detects a new login from a browser or computer it has not seen before.

 

So just remember, if your email password is not unique, change it! If your email password contains a just a single dictionary word, change it! If your email provider supports two-factor authentication but it's not enabled, turn it on! Your email is the single greatest point of failure of your online identity.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1385127-securing-your-email-is-important/
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, Steven P. said:

Or use two-factor authentication, then you can have a weak ass password all you like, but you aren't getting in without the second step auth.

That isn't true at all. 2FA isn't the end all and isn't a guarantee you are safe. 

2 hours ago, Steven P. said:

Thread cleaned, please stay on topic.

It's ok Steve, I don't mind if my threads go off topic, Off topic is still comments, comments still bump me to the front page, front page gives me views :)

Hello,

 

A properly-engineered, properly-implemented and properly-used multi-factor authentication system can greatly increase the security of account logins by providing resistance against brute-forcing, password-reset attacks and so forth.  Of course, if the second factor is vulnerable to phone (SIM or account) resets, token theft, biometric spoofing, and so forth, then a large amount of additional security layer is mitigated.

 

Regards,

 

Aryeh Goretsky

On 7/24/2019 at 1:53 AM, Circaflex said:

That isn't true at all. 2FA isn't the end all and isn't a guarantee you are safe. 

Many security experts are saying that if you use 2fa you never have to change your password again. 

 

Right now, there is no known way to bypass 2fa or get the code/onetime auth key without having your device.  It is better to use a token that is registered to your device via an authenticator app vs a password.  If you know of a way to bypass/circumvent 2fa, I am sure all of us would like to know.

2 hours ago, sc302 said:

Right now, there is no known way to bypass 2fa

Depends what the 2fa method is.

SMS can for sure be circumvented - there are many know hacks to this. Pretty sure nist has or is dropping it as valid/recommended method even.

This is why the 3 points of @goretsky "A properly-engineered, properly-implemented and properly-used" are so critical - and can tell you for pretty much fact the weakest link in that chain is going to properly used point "user"... 

 

And there are multiple ways to get around other 2fa.. mitm sort of attacks, mitendpoint, compromised software, etc. etc..

here

https://www.rsaconference.com/writable/presentations/file_upload/idy-f02-12-ways-to-hack-2fa.pdf

So saying there is no known way is just not true..

 

3 minutes ago, BudMan said:

Depends what the 2fa method is.

SMS can for sure be circumvented - there are many know hacks to this. Pretty sure nist has or is dropping it as valid/recommended method even.

This is why the 3 points of @goretsky "A properly-engineered, properly-implemented and properly-used" are so critical - and can tell you for pretty much fact the weakest link in that chain is going to properly used point "user"... 

 

You are right a PAYG phone and a weak password written on a post it note stuck on the computer screen just isn't enough!

Also, malware on the device that would forward the 2FA. This would be more of a whaling type scenario though. Also, if you have a device that was compromised or you wrote your secret that is used to generate the 2FA token and it was stolen, by passing 2FA would be fairly easy. 

 

Always have the application/software alert you of any new logins. This would help incase it was compromised. 

On 7/23/2019 at 10:55 PM, warwagon said:

When it comes to securing your online accounts with a strong password and two-factor authentication, one of the most IMPORTANT online accounts to secure is your email.

Very true! I secure my personal and professional email accounts with crazy long passwords generated by LastPass, and behind TOTP 2FA. And my LastPass password is even longer, again behind 2FA. Finally, I change these 3 passwords and a few other critical ones once a month. :)

2 hours ago, BudMan said:

Depends what the 2fa method is.

SMS can for sure be circumvented - there are many know hacks to this. Pretty sure nist has or is dropping it as valid/recommended method even.

This is why the 3 points of @goretsky "A properly-engineered, properly-implemented and properly-used" are so critical - and can tell you for pretty much fact the weakest link in that chain is going to properly used point "user"... 

 

And there are multiple ways to get around other 2fa.. mitm sort of attacks, mitendpoint, compromised software, etc. etc..

here

https://www.rsaconference.com/writable/presentations/file_upload/idy-f02-12-ways-to-hack-2fa.pdf

So saying there is no known way is just not true..

 

sorry, going back several years to when rsa key was the standard.  I should know to stay up on knowBe4

2 hours ago, The Dark Knight said:

Very true! I secure my personal and professional email accounts with crazy long passwords generated by LastPass, and behind TOTP 2FA. And my LastPass password is even longer, again behind 2FA. Finally, I change these 3 passwords and a few other critical ones once a month. :)

Ya, I don't change mine once a month. That just sounds like a pain, give I have 8 gmail address :D

Change my important passwords usually every 6 months, which is coming due again,  I used to do it around Windows new releases, but I got a little behind this year,  but will get it done in a day or two, and make accounts more secure again.    Then I should be set,   might setup Microsoft Authenicator as well,  I do have Google setup with clicking yes or no on login if it's me from my Galaxy S10e.

 

Too much trouble trying to change every account password, but I know I should again, just know it's gonna take a while

 

11 hours ago, bikeman25 said:

Change my important passwords usually every 6 months

You guys need to keep up, and I have always said this - changing passwords for the sake of changing passwords is BS.. And the guy  that wrote the standard has come out and said as much.

 

NIST now clearly states

"“SHOULD NOT require memorized secrets to be changed arbitrarily (e.g., periodically).”"

 

Unless something has happened, someone left the company.  There has been some breach or something... Changing your password because its been 90 days has always just been utter ######.. And you know what it does do - it forces people to write ###### down ;)

  • Like 5
9 minutes ago, BudMan said:

You guys need to keep up, and I have always said this - changing passwords for the sake of changing passwords is BS.. And the guy  that wrote the standard has come out and said as much.

 

NIST now clearly states

"“SHOULD NOT require memorized secrets to be changed arbitrarily (e.g., periodically).”"

 

Unless something has happened, someone left the company.  There has been some breach or something... Changing your password because its been 90 days has always just been utter ######.. And you know what it does do - it forces people to write ###### down ;)

When I first started working, I needed to remember three fairly complex passwords all of which needed to be changed every 90 days. And like you said, in the end I wrote my passwords down. 

2 hours ago, BudMan said:

You guys need to keep up, and I have always said this - changing passwords for the sake of changing passwords is BS.. And the guy  that wrote the standard has come out and said as much.

 

NIST now clearly states

"“SHOULD NOT require memorized secrets to be changed arbitrarily (e.g., periodically).”"

 

Unless something has happened, someone left the company.  There has been some breach or something... Changing your password because its been 90 days has always just been utter ######.. And you know what it does do - it forces people to write ###### down ;)

Forcing users to change their password every 90 days also forces them to rotate ###### passwords

2 minutes ago, Steven P. said:

## # ### isn't a great password :s 

Why does the 4 letter swear word that starts with S ends with T show up as ###### <------6 characters long ... now they don't know what swear word I was going for, so then I have to edit it so it has the correct amount of ####

2 minutes ago, warwagon said:

Why does the 4 letter swear word that starts with S ends with T show up as ###### <------6 characters long ... now they don't know what swear word I was going for, so then I have to edit it so it has the correct amount of ####

Because at the time moderators didn't want swear words to have the same amount of characters so that people could instantly fill in the word by themselves, it was requested to use a generic term, which is what I did. (and another fine example of how I don't decide everything on my own).

2 hours ago, BudMan said:

You guys need to keep up, and I have always said this - changing passwords for the sake of changing passwords is BS.. And the guy  that wrote the standard has come out and said as much.

 

NIST now clearly states

"“SHOULD NOT require memorized secrets to be changed arbitrarily (e.g., periodically).”"

 

Unless something has happened, someone left the company.  There has been some breach or something... Changing your password because its been 90 days has always just been utter ######.. And you know what it does do - it forces people to write ###### down ;)

Ya, I always thought changing passwords just for the sake of it or due to number of days was dumb as dirt. Can't even begin to remember last time I changed my passwords! Don't know a single person that's changed their passwords. Don't know of a single person that's ever had their e-mail hacked or anything either.

Still required to change passwords every 90 days for various work related sites/government sites.  Some of them have to be around 15 characters ... can't use x number of characters previously used (so you can't just go up a digit or whatever) ... 

 

Though the work related sites are slowly but surely transitioning away from username/password to CAC card/pin number.  Praise baby Jesus.

3 hours ago, BudMan said:

You guys need to keep up, and I have always said this - changing passwords for the sake of changing passwords is BS.. And the guy  that wrote the standard has come out and said as much.

 

NIST now clearly states

"“SHOULD NOT require memorized secrets to be changed arbitrarily (e.g., periodically).”"

 

Unless something has happened, someone left the company.  There has been some breach or something... Changing your password because its been 90 days has always just been utter ######.. And you know what it does do - it forces people to write ###### down ;)

100% 

 

I used to change my entire list every 90 days. What a fool I was. I was using LastPass at the time and have since migrated to BitWarden and have always used strong, tool generated passwords, often at the length limit of the site. I was changing these for no reason.  Today I continue to use strong passwords (as should everyone) and 2FA when available with a preference to time based values over SMS codes. Changing a 23 character password that I never knew to start with every 90 days was foolish and a monumental waste of time.  

 

I just wish my employer would stop making us change them every 90 days AND allowed us to use a password manager.

  • 4 weeks later...
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft is bringing big performance improvements to OneDrive on Mac by Taras Buria Microsoft has announced a major update for the OneDrive client on macOS. Today, the company released version 26.098, promising significantly faster sync, optimized CPU usage, a smaller memory footprint, and better energy efficiency. In a newly published blog post, Microsoft acknowledged that changes implemented in OneDrive for Mac in 2022 brought some unwanted side effects. Due to architectural changes and the need to keep the OneDrive sync engine unchanged, Microsoft created a hidden cache folder. With time, it would cause reliability and performance issues for customers. Now, Microsoft is ditching the old engine for native sync, delivering a faster, more reliable experience. As a result of this change, OneDrive for Mac now integrates more deeply into the operating system, offers about two times faster sync performance, and uses fewer system resources. While the hidden folder still exists, the app only uses it to store files that have not been uploaded yet, link file types, and macOS-related packages. In total, even when holding hundreds of files, the temporary folder does not take more than a couple of megabytes on the drive. Besides optimizations, the new sync engine enables external drive support, allowing you to keep your OneDrive folder on a removable drive (it should meet all the requirements). Microsoft is now rolling out the updated OneDrive client for Microsoft 365 Insiders. To check if your Mac has the new sync engine, go to the About tab and check the app version. If it ends with something like 26H, you are on the new engine. If not, you are on the old one. Microsoft says it will take a few weeks to complete the rollout to Insiders, but it won't say when to expect the update in the stable channel. Big performance updates for OneDrive on Mac came right after Microsoft confirmed it would soon kill document editing in Office 2019 for Mac due to expiring certificates. This change will force users to look for alternatives or switch to Microsoft 365.
    • Sorry but that makes no sense. What does using the same laptop have to do with anything? 
    • Playground drops 30 minutes of Fable gameplay, shows off life sim and morality system by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Playground Games gave fantasy RPG fans a new look at its Fable reboot last Sunday at the Xbox Games Showcase. While that was a short cinematic trailer revealing the main villain of the storyline, played by Hayley Atwell, today, the development team released an entire gameplay demo to show off the game in action. There is some combat and action near the end of it, but most of the demo is focused on the game's NPC simulation, relationships, choices players can make, and the complex reputation system. The studio is touting over 1,000 hand-crafted NPCs who have jobs, homes, routines they follow in their villages and outskirts, and a memory of what is going on in the world and what actions the player has done. All of these are voiced by real people too. The demo begins with a short interaction with a butcher who wants to kill a talking pig named Colin. The protagonist chooses to save Colin by paying the butcher a bunch of gold for his troubles, giving the hero a rise in reputation for being shrewd, merciful, and virtuous. There were also options to simply let Colin get killed or even fight the butcher for the pig instead of paying him. How NPCs judge the player depends on how they interact with the world. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doV0yq4kAP0 Later, the demo shows off how purchasing and managing businesses work, where players can hire employees, change their wages, tweak the price of the shop items, and reap profits if they do well. Different NPCs react differently to each type of reputation the player is touting. One shop owner jacks up prices by 80% just because the player is rich and owns businesses. The demo even shows the player deciding to attack random villagers and causing a ruckus in the streets, turning the hero into a criminal. This is where the magic combat systems are shown off, where the player can teleport, turn enemies into chickens, sword-fight, and more. "This is how you’ll build an extraordinary life in Fable. It’s all about shades of grey – it’s not us or the game telling you what is good and what is bad," says Dan Greer, Lead Game Designer. "With the Living Population, it’s the NPCs themselves judging your actions." Fable is releasing across PC and Xbox Series X|S on February 23, 2027. Premium Edition owners will be able to play starting on February 18 instead. Xbox Game Pass subscribers will also be able to jump in at launch for no extra cost.
    • Still 93% off: Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2026 lifetime digital license by Steven Parker Today's highlighted deal comes via our Apps + Software section of the Neowin Deals store, where for a limited time you can still save 93% on Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2026. Code Faster, Work Smarter with Visual Studio 2026 Visual Studio Professional 2026 is a fully featured development environment that developers around the world know & love — now enhanced with deeper AI integration, improved performance & more powerful collaboration tools. Built as a 64-bit IDE, it makes it easier than ever to work with very large solutions & complex workloads. Boost your productivity, write high-quality code & re-imagine team collaboration with an advanced suite of tools & built-in integrations designed to tackle the most demanding development workflows & deliver modern, cloud-connected applications. Build across languages and platforms Craft cross-platform mobile & desktop apps with .NET MAUI Build responsive Web UIs in C# with Blazor Build, debug, & test .NET & C++ apps targeting Windows, Linux & containers Use hot reload capabilities across .NET & C++ apps to apply code changes instantly Edit running ASP.NET/ASP.NET Core pages in the web designer view Integrate seamlessly with Azure, GitHub & other DevOps workflows Type less, code more with Intellicode and AI Understand your code context: variable names, functions, libraries & the type of code you’re writing Complete a line or block of code based on patterns learned from your codebase Get a ranked list of next best suggestions, helping you code more rapidly & accurately Use built-in AI-assisted refactoring & code suggestions to reduce bugs & boilerplate Gain deep insights into your code with codelens Reveal crucial information such as recent changes, authors, tests & commit history directly in the editor See test status & references without leaving your code Make informed decisions with a comprehensive overview of your codebase and activity Collaborate seamlessly with live share Run real-time collaboration sessions with teammates — no need for them to clone repos or install all dependencies Speed up your team’s edit & debugging cycles with personalized sessions, access controls & custom editor settings Keep everyone aligned so your team’s code stays consistent & maintainable Good to know Length of access: Lifetime License type: Professional, single-user license Redemption deadline: Redeem your code within 30 days of purchase Access options: Desktop installation on supported Windows operating systems Max number of device(s): 1 Version: Visual Studio Professional 2026 Languages supported: English, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, and Turkish. Updates included: Minor updates and security fixes for the 2026 Professional release channel (according to Microsoft’s lifecycle policy) Activation method: Online activation with Microsoft account required Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2026 normally costs $499.99, but this deal can be yours for just $34.97, that's a saving of $465. For full terms, specifications, and license info please click the link below. Get Visual Studio 2026 now for just $34.97 (was $499.99) Time limited deal Although priced in U.S. dollars, this deal is available for digital purchase worldwide. Support queries If you have queries or need support for any of the Neowin Deals, please use the contact form here. Neowin Deals are managed and sold by StackCommerce who represent Neowin on an affiliate basis. Why we post these deals We post these because we earn commission on each sale so as not to rely solely on advertising, which many of our readers block. It all helps toward paying staff reporters, servers and hosting costs. So for those that keep moaning and complaining, be thankful we're still online for you to even do that. Other ways to support Neowin Whitelist Neowin by not blocking our ads Create a free member account to see fewer ads Make a donation to support our day to day running costs Subscribe to Neowin - for $14 a year, or $28 a year for an ad-free experience Disclosure: Neowin benefits from revenue of each sale made through our branded deals site powered by StackCommerce.
    • My current phone, on left, is starting to go to sleep, and not turning on, even though I press the power button 100 times. Like CPR.   I tried factory resetting it, and nothing changed. So it's the hardware failing. I currently am using Twigby as my service provider. Cheapest I can get around here. But all their phones are carp.. https://www.twigby.com/shop/twigby-phones A friend warned me about the Moto G, as his neice has one, and isn't that good at $130. Also the Samsung A15 is laughable at best. Everything else is expensive af. I want android, (hate iOS) any version, that works with Twigby, under $100, please. Refurbished/Used is OK with me, as long as it isn't beat up.   If you know the IMEI number, you can see if it works with Twigby: https://www.twigby.com/page/byod
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      StaticMatrix earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      lamborghiniv10 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Month Later
      pinnclepd earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • First Post
      X-No-file earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      johnjacobb40 earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      517
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      211
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      147
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      92
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      82
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!