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SplashData compiles an annual list of the most common (and therefore, the worst) passwords from those listings.

1. password (Unchanged)

2, 123456 (Unchanged)

3. 12345678 (Unchanged)

4. abc123 (Up 1)

5. qwerty (Down 1)

6. monkey (Unchanged)

7. letmein (Up 1)

8. dragon (Up 2)

9. 111111 (Up 3)

10. baseball (Up 1)

11. iloveyou (Up 2)

12. trustno1 (Down 3)

13. 1234567 (Down 6)

14. sunshine (Up 1)

15. master (Down 1)

16. 123123 (Up 4)

17. welcome (New)

18. shadow (Up 1)

19. ashley (Down 3)

20. football (Up 5)

21. jesus (New)

22. michael (Up 2)

23. ninja (New)

24. mustang (New)

25. password1 (New)

Keep creating the same old passwords? Here's a few tips:

- Use the first letter from each word in a phrase or line from a song. For example, "Hey, I just met you... And this is crazy... But here's my number... So call me maybe" could be "hijmyaticbhmnscmm." Of course, you'll be stuck singing the damn thing in your head every time you log in.

- Combine two words, such as "hungrydog" or "choppywater." For added security, separate those words with symbols or numbers, or swap numbers in place of certain letters. So instead of "hungrydog," use"hungry$d0g."

- If the site is case-sensitive, vary upper and lower case letters, as well as using numbers and symbols. ("ViDeOgAmE," for example, is much more secure than "videogame.")

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I actually like the tip for using lyrics from a song. Thing with me personally, I tend to make up my own lyrics a lot of the time. Just have to remember to stick with my version. :laugh:

People really use passwords that simple? Wow!

I do at work because we have like 5 different passwords, each have their own slightly different requirements and have to change every 4 months. Easier to make and keep same password for everything and also way easier to remember.

Now, they aren't THAT simple as there's a mix of upper/lowercase and numbers.

- Use the first letter from each word in a phrase or line from a song. For example, "Hey, I just met you... And this is crazy... But here's my number... So call me maybe" could be "hijmyaticbhmnscmm." Of course, you'll be stuck singing the damn thing in your head every time you log in.

This is basically what I do. You can come up with an incredibly secure password:

I own a red stationwagon I purchased in two thousand and ten -- might become

ioarsipi20t or ioarsipitt10

You're never going to forget the colour of your car or the year you purchased it and the sentence is simple to remember.

I live in a red-brick house next to a yellow-brick house:

iliar-bhntay-bh

And so on. Always works for me, and I have about half a dozen like that which I can easily remember.

Note: I don't own a red stationwagon or live in a red-brick house :p

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