Information Technology (IT) policy that passwords used to access the platform at COSTDRIVERS should be strong.
IT
strongly encourages the use of strong
passwords for all users.
A strong password is one that is more secure by virtue of being difficult for a
machine or a human to guess. Password strength can be achieved by incorporating
the following characteristics; the more features you include in your password, the
stronger it will be.
Characteristics of strong passwords
• At least 8 characters—the more characters, the better
• A mixture of both uppercase and lowercase letters
• A mixture of letters and numbers
• Inclusion of at least one special character, e.g., ! @ # ? ]
• Note:
do not use < or > in your password, as both can cause problems in
Web browsers.
A strong password is hard to guess, but it should be easy for you to remember—a
password that has to be written down is not strong, no matter how many of the
above characteristics are employed.
While all users that use the COSTDRIVERS e-mail and password for
authentication support a password with the above characteristics, please note that
other platforms or websites may not support similarly strong passwords.
For example, a platform may not recognize case, limit the number of characters, or
may not allow special characters.
IT
recommends that in these situations, users
incorporate as many strong password characteristics as the platform will allow.
Examples of weak passwords
• Any word that can be found in a dictionary, in any language (e.g., airplane
or
aeroplano
).
• A dictionary word with some letters simply replaced by numbers (e.g.,
a1rplan3 or aer0plan0).
• A repeated character or a series of characters (e.g., AAAAA or 12345).
• A keyboard series of characters (e.g., qwerty or poiuy).
• Personal information (e.g., birthdays, names of pets or friends, Social
Security number, addresses).
• Anything that’s written down and stored somewhere near your computer.
Tips for keeping your password secure
• Change it regularly—once every month to three months.
• Change it if you have the slightest suspicion that the password has become
known by a human or a machine.
• Never use it for other websites.
• Avoid typing it on computers that you do not trust; for example, in an
Internet café.
• Never save it for a web form on a computer that you do not control or used
by more than one person.
• Never tell it to anyone.
• Never write it down.
Tips for creating a strong password
Think of a word or phrase, and then substitute the letters with numbers and special characters
and mix the case. For example:
• Snoopy and Woodstock
becomes
Sno0py&ws
• In the dog house
becomes
!nTh3dawgHs
• Let’s have dinner at 8:00 p.m.
becomes
Lhd@800pm
Think of a word and a number, then intermix them and mix the case. For example, your
elementary school name (
Main
Street Elementary) and your pet’s birth month and year (
12/96
)
becomes
m1A2/i9n6