Internet security and homeless animals might seem to have little in common. But they come together quite adorably in Skallagrimsson, a boxer mix puppy who is available for adoption in New York City.
Skalla, as his temporary caretakers at the city’s Bideawee shelter organization call him, was recently named by the Swedish cybersecurity firm BehavioSec. It chose similarly unwieldy monikers for a few of his sheltermates — both to draw attention and potential adopters their way and, the firm says, “to give a selection of adoptable puppies and kittens extraordinary, rare names designed to provide their new owners with a lifetime of cybersecure passwords and security questions.”
That’s because we internet users have password problems, as data breaches frequently remind us. We pick terrible, easily hackable ones like “password” and “123456” and, yes, our pets’ names.
Easy targets
Pet names make for poor passwords because many people give their dogs and cats the same ones — Bella and Charlie, for example, are popular for American pooches. And using those as passwords, BehavioSec spokesman Benedict Bunyard said, can make people vulnerable to “a ‘dictionary attack,’ where a hacker runs a list of common passwords through a program to quickly try thousands of entries (meaning that Otto1 and Charlie99 will almost certainly come up).”