Have you ever stopped to think about the number of different services you use on a daily basis? Surely there are many, and in most of them we store and share all kinds of private information. Now, how many different passwords do you have? Are they really safe? And most importantly, where do you keep them?
Passwords are our great treasure. They are the gateway to practically our entire digital life. What if someone gets to know your email password? Better not think about it, but if we don’t want it to happen, we must do our part.
And beware, we are no longer just talking about someone attacking us directly or that we “lose” our password by having it written on a piece of paper in our wallet or glued to the computer screen. Over the last few years we have seen countless cases of large services and applications that have suffered a security breach and millions of users and passwords have been leaked. Among them may be ours.
A basic security rule is not to use the same password for everything. Easy right? According to one of the latest studies by Panda Security, half of Spaniards use the same password for all their accounts. Big mistake.
In addition, these studies also reveal very unwise habits: 90% of users believe that their passwords are secure and “difficult” to guess, but the reality is that the vast majority of passwords are not robust. It is not enough to combine uppercase, lowercase and numbers, much less add common words or dates. Any attacker who puts his mind to it could quickly crack them.
Manage all your passwords
With this situation, we are faced with another problem: memorizing all our passwords.
If we have different passwords for different services, and they are also complete passwords, with special characters and symbols, the task of memorizing them becomes practically impossible. Not to mention that there will be passwords that we only use every X months and others daily.
The password manager of Panda Security wants to get things a lot easier, a unique place from which to access all data login of our accounts, as well as any personal information we want to be well guarded.
Panda Dome Password solves that of having to memorize complicated passwords. Under this password manager we will save everything under a single master key, and we can access everything from any operating system, including from Android and iOS.
This password manager allows us to auto-fill forms with our information, thus saving time when registering for new services, and more importantly: it is capable of generating passwords with military grade security using its algorithms. At the same time, we can save any type of information in the form of secure notes, as if they were virtual post-its but completely encrypted.
If you really care about your data, pay attention to the security of your accounts, check the passwords, improve their security and simplify the whole process by using a password manager.