After "qwerty", it's the most common password in the U.S. iirc. Americans aren't the brightest bulbs in the chandelier, unfortunately :/
Thats such a poor analysis. There might be an extremely small amount of people that are dummies using that password, but by the nature of passwords any sort of obvious password will come up way more often..
As long as the laws of physics remain intact, I think we always will have at least one password that is the most common. Whether it is "qwerty" or not is quite irrelevant, because it will certainly be included in any dictionary anyway (of course "qwerty" is more likely to be the most common password than "ez4jerom" for obvious reasons). The question is how common it is.
After "qwerty", it's the most common password in the U.S. iirc. Americans aren't the brightest bulbs in the chandelier, unfortunately :/
Thats such a poor analysis. There might be an extremely small amount of people that are dummies using that password, but by the nature of passwords any sort of obvious password will come up way more often..
I'm not making an assumption, that's based off of actual data.
By nature of passwords the most picked password will literally always be an obvious one. How can you then conclude that people are stupid mostly? Even if its possible 99.9% of people has a very complex and secure password based of your actual data?????