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Why your passwords suck..

Aperture | March 21, 2026



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We all have passwords, they’re part of our daily lives, but how secure is your password? Chances are, you’re not the only one using your password, and this is one of the most dangerous things affecting your entire life.

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Comments

This post currently has 32 comments.

  1. @esshor.

    March 21, 2026 at 5:52 am

    It’s ridiculous how complicated passwords are now required to be. Because they’re not even a simple thing you could possibly remember. just random jumbled crap. What I’ve chosen to do now is take a famous quote, and then just supplement all the letters that could be written as numbers or symbols with those digits

  2. @Waffles4903

    March 21, 2026 at 5:52 am

    I don't even really consider passwords that often, and this video still manages to maintain it's relevancy for me. Might have to start examining the few sites I actually use passwords with, and check for safety. Glad I got the heads up!

  3. @hamiyetkezer7972

    March 21, 2026 at 5:52 am

    I just look at random objects and use that as my password like a bottle of water im belgian so it waterfles and my password for almost every thing is

    Water-240Kfl8s

  4. @CypressDahlia

    March 21, 2026 at 5:52 am

    passwords suck because 99.99999% of he the time, these security measures stand as a roadblock to the user trying to access their own materials and, in the case of the .000001% of the time where it's a hacker doing it, the companies have literally no legitimate security measure or security net to handle it. So it's a chore the vast majority of the time and useless when it's needed.

  5. @Satori_kun

    March 21, 2026 at 5:52 am

    the feel when you started everything this video suggested years ago. I have created a system where I combine one word with a string of numbers and another word or abbreviation or random characters. Throwing in character substitution and capital letters enable me to create a large pool of passwords that are still kind of easy to remember because some parts never change while others are always different (tbf I started to write them down on a piece of paper and storing it at home in a save place because as the total amount has risen it became almost impossible for me to guess my own passwords even tho I know the pattern)

  6. @mikeobrien1559

    March 21, 2026 at 5:52 am

    When asked for the name of his cat by his vet's receptionist, a friend of mine responded "Blackie", when in actuality, the cat's real name was Fweep-Fweep.😏 When most people first get a pet, they are full of potential love and name the animal the cutest thing they can think of, but they have no idea how many twists and turns that developing love will take as the bond between them and their pet develops into a unique love that will continue to grow long after that pet has gone. The original name quickly outlives its usefulness and often becomes even wrong seeming. It is replaced with a series of evermore cringeworthy cutesy-pie nicknames that no one else could ever possibly think of without throwing up to death. As passwords, these nicknames rival the language of the Navajo code-talkers of World War II.

  7. @hisetip

    March 21, 2026 at 5:52 am

    Here is a suggestion to create a strong password:
    Think of a sentence in your head. Something big but that you won't forget. Something like "I would buy a Tesla if only I could sell my 30 years old Mercedes".

    Now, take only the first letters of each word: "IwbaTioIcsm30yoM". This would be your password. From a "hacking" POV, it's very hard to crack. Even if someone sees you writing it down (try not to!), it's still hard to remember, since it will resemble nothing—just random characters.

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