Happy New Year! It's that time of year that I do my Geeky house cleaning, so it's another year going over my past posts about this topic and thinking how to improve them! At first I thought I could leave out the password comic & tip and then the Sony thing happened. WTHeck!? It was recently released that some Sony employees had a password of s0ny123 and the worst, "password!" Also, with brute force hacking making the rounds, I decided to update a few of my tips.
"The only person you can rely on to keep your password secure is yourself. And let me tell you, you're probably not doing enough to keep number one safe. The reason: Your special lump of letters, numbers, and symbols are likely spread over too many sites, are not long enough, and are probably too personal. Most of our passwords suck. And it's kind of a big problem." - Gizmodo
"The only person you can rely on to keep your password secure is yourself. And let me tell you, you're probably not doing enough to keep number one safe. The reason: Your special lump of letters, numbers, and symbols are likely spread over too many sites, are not long enough, and are probably too personal. Most of our passwords suck. And it's kind of a big problem." - Gizmodo
1. Craft a Perfect Password & Dump Your Cache
OK, so there IS no perfect! According to Lifehacker:
Basically, have a root password consisting of 5 non-related words or a pass phrase, varying numeric and character substitutions and add an ending that has something to do with each website.
EX: "escalators go up" turns into: esc@lator$((G0))up** = 20 characters
for Twitter: esc@lator$((G0))up**TWIT = 24 characters. Use the secure and handy "GRC search space calculator" to see if your password has teeth!
Another tip, forget these machinations all together, consider downloading a password keeper to make life easier because you only have to remember one super-secure password. iOS 8 users could try the "holy grail" of password keepers from 1Password.
Oh and in the small print of my comic I said 3 important things: Turn off your wifi & bluetooth until you need them - especially in airports and on trains!
When was the last time you dumped your cache, cleared your history, and removed cookies? At least once a year (I try quarterly) go around to every computer you use at school, public & private -and dump the cache, clear your cookies, & browsing history.
Please note my Disclaimer - I'm not a security expert and nothing is foolproof. Geeks all over the world have different opinions about passwords and security (and I want to hear them in the comments!) - these are just mine.
2. Is Your WiFi Secure?OK, so there IS no perfect! According to Lifehacker:
Adding just one capital letter and one asterisk would change the processing time for an 8 character password from 2.4 days to 2.1 centuries.
— The Daring Librarian (@GwynethJones) December 28, 2014
But maybe you can use this handy Comic Tutorial to create a really super new password for every website you visit....don't worry, there's a trick! You don't have to go to every site you use right away - just make a commitment that when you do go to a site that requires your password, you take the extra 5 min to change your password - using one of the 4 tips & suggestions in my new updated Comic. Basically, have a root password consisting of 5 non-related words or a pass phrase, varying numeric and character substitutions and add an ending that has something to do with each website.
EX: "escalators go up" turns into: esc@lator$((G0))up** = 20 characters
for Twitter: esc@lator$((G0))up**TWIT = 24 characters. Use the secure and handy "GRC search space calculator" to see if your password has teeth!
Another tip, forget these machinations all together, consider downloading a password keeper to make life easier because you only have to remember one super-secure password. iOS 8 users could try the "holy grail" of password keepers from 1Password.
Oh and in the small print of my comic I said 3 important things: Turn off your wifi & bluetooth until you need them - especially in airports and on trains!
When was the last time you dumped your cache, cleared your history, and removed cookies? At least once a year (I try quarterly) go around to every computer you use at school, public & private -and dump the cache, clear your cookies, & browsing history.
Please note my Disclaimer - I'm not a security expert and nothing is foolproof. Geeks all over the world have different opinions about passwords and security (and I want to hear them in the comments!) - these are just mine.
After you set up your home WiFi network, did you set a secure password to protect it from squatters? If not, now's the time to do that. Not only can strangers steal your signal for unlawful activities, but they can creep in and gain access to your personal documents and information, which can lead to identity theft.
iCloud & Dropbox were supposed to streamline our lives by keeping everything in sync. Now it's done its job just a bit too well, and many iClouds and Dropboxes are full of perfectly synced junk. Clear out your iCloud and prune your digital data life. I've blogged about Dropbox before, but this past year I finally went all the way with Dropbox and I'm paying for a TB of PRO. When I go to each of my devices (2 iPads, an iPhone 6plus, 2 laptops, and a desktop at school) I don't have to transfer my documents because they are already there once I install Dropbox! Boom!
Your smartphone and tablet are weighed down with one-hit-wonder apps that you were obsessed with for a week and then forgot about. (Ahem, Draw Something & Flappy Bird, anyone?) Go through your apps and rid yourself of the excess baggage. Don't Push Me! Retake control of your apps and your attention span by turning off all your push notifications — every badge, alert, and banner. Then, once you realize if you’ve actually been missing particular apps’ updates, turn them back on one at a time.
With Dropbox and iCloud syncing all our pics, take time to organize, tag, and curate them. With a TB of FREE photo storage, easy tagging, sharing, and organizing, I use Flickr. I'm still shaking my head over the fact that for YEARS I was uploading pics without adding any tags to them - so that finding them is a super chore now! So, create albums, add tags to each picture (or group), and set up an easily managed system for the photos in your life.
We all have old accounts. Did you ever delete your MySpace page? I just did! My Care2 created in 199? Just now dumped it! Did you set up a Diigo account of bookmarks that you really never dug? Deleting your old accounts keeps your web presence up to date. And it just feels good. Ahhh!
Want to clean up your house and earn some Amazon gift cards? You definitely must check out Amazon’s Trade-In Program. Go through your home and find any DVDs, Books, Video Games, or electronics you no longer need or use. Do a search on the Amazon Trade-In Store to see how much Amazon will pay you for a Trade In. If the price seems fair, click through to verify the condition, title, and price.You just print out a shipping label and take the nearest UPS store. Amazon gets it, and if they agree it's in the shape you said they automatically deposit the $$ into your Amazon account. I did this with my iPhone4S and got $165. I actually under estimated the value and they gave me $10 more! Note to my future self, keep the original boxes of new technology.
There's something reassuring about having a polished profile that is consistent and updated around all of your social network accounts. Part of branding is to make sure that when people land on an account of yours, they recognize you. For most of my accounts, like Twitter, I use my David Lanham comic avatar, but for Yelp and LinkedIn I use my real picture. I also like to use my favourite colour schemes and backgrounds - and yes, the Tardis! If you change your profile picture a too frequently, you may lose that all important recognizability factor with your followers.
Having a Personal Learning Network is essential to stay in tune with the trends and what's going on in our profession. Sart talking to other excited educators about new ideas on Twitter...crowdsource! Comment on conversations, ask and answer questions, find a way to contribute! (I try to give 95% and only ask for help 5% - don't be needy or whiny!) GIVE, give, and give some more! Share shamelesly! Give your greatest works to our profession - it's good ed tech karma!
After a while, you want to look at your followers and start pruning. I just used ManageFlitter to discover that I have 719 people I'm following who don't follow me back. I get it that I can't expect Stephen King not to follow me but
Do you really need to have your phone sitting on the dinner table to monitor your Twitter feed? Probably not. Is your phone or iPad binging and zinging every five minutes with updates and notices? Getting so involved in your virtual life can really take away from the real life happening right in front of you. Take some time away from your gadgets and gear in order to appreciate the scene instead of Tweeting about it to your followers.
I'm kinda sorta guilty of this. [hangs head in shame] So this is one thing I'm going to try and work on this year! I'm even going to be blogging more about this soon with a day by day set of steps to improve your digital detox and I'm also going to be taking 5 days this summer "off the grid" going to an Ashram / Spa w/ my Mom where NO ELECTRONICS ARE ALLOWED. [gulp!] I've always been good at keeping my gadgets on Do Not Disturb (unless I'm expecting a call) and to always have my phone and iPad on silent, but I need to mentally disconnect from my digital life more. Why not give it a try?
What are YOUR tech resolutions, tips, and techniques?
I'd love to hear them in the comments!
References, Reads, & Credits
Why Your Phone's Airplane Mode Isn't Just for the Airplane
How I’d Hack Your Weak Passwords
Hackers show ways to protect your iPhone
7 safety tips from hackers
The top 50 passwords you should never use | Naked Security
10 Tech Resolutions to Consider in the New Year | TIME
5 New Year's Resolutions To Manage Your Tech Habits
Learning to Let Go: First, Turn Off the Phone
Creating and Remembering Complex Passwords by Alex Jones (not my nephew!)
The original XKCD comic:
(click above for full size on XKCD!)Cool Stuff From Your Comments!
This is from a daring reader, Pamela Hill @TechieLibrarian
Thanks Pam for your contribution and your comment!
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