Difference between revisions of "Operating Systems/Linux/Ubuntu/Ubuntu 16.04 LTS/Bad-Passwords"
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(Created page with "==Why Passwords== Passwords are required to keep accounts and info limited to only those that should have access; however, weak (bad) passwords can compromise this by making t...") |
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*Easy to remember | *Easy to remember | ||
**So you can type it in more naturally and so you don't resort to poor practices like writing it on a sticky note. | **So you can type it in more naturally and so you don't resort to poor practices like writing it on a sticky note. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==How Do You Know To Change a Password?== | ||
| + | *It won't directly say in the README that you need to change a password. Look at the admin passwords in the README and if something looks to be kind of simple, change it. | ||
== How to Set Someone's Password == | == How to Set Someone's Password == | ||
Latest revision as of 12:20, 20 October 2023
Why Passwords[edit | edit source]
Passwords are required to keep accounts and info limited to only those that should have access; however, weak (bad) passwords can compromise this by making the accounts easier to access via brute force cracking or using rainbow tables, that of course being undesirable.
What Makes a Good Password[edit | edit source]
A good password should be: complex, long, and easy to remember.
- Complex (Character Classes)
- Letters
- Numbers
- Symbols
- Emojis 🤷♂️
- Long
- 10+ letters long
- Easy to remember
- So you can type it in more naturally and so you don't resort to poor practices like writing it on a sticky note.
How Do You Know To Change a Password?[edit | edit source]
- It won't directly say in the README that you need to change a password. Look at the admin passwords in the README and if something looks to be kind of simple, change it.
How to Set Someone's Password[edit | edit source]
Often times you will see an account with a weak password in the readme, you will get points for changing it to something more secure. (do NOT change the password of the account you are logged in as)
CLI[edit | edit source]
- Open
Terminal - Run
sudo bash - Run
passwd [name of user]1 - Then follow the prompts
- (you should probably document the password somewhere in case you need to access the account again, not good sec practices but it works for this)
GUI[edit | edit source]
- Open
System Settings - Navigate to
User Accounts - Unlock the settings page
- Click on the dotted out password of the user who's password you want to change
- Fill in the boxes on the window that pops up and click
Change
1I have been having trouble getting passwd to work, whatever I enter it only changes the root password. However, according to all the documentation I have seen that should work.