If you are interesting in testing how strong is your password try Check your password ( Microsoft Online Safety ). A strong password is extremely import to safe all your information and should be include numbers, symbols, upper and lowercase letters in passwords, also avoid any password based on repetition, dictionary words, letter or number sequences. Link : Check your password Read also : RandomKeyGen , online password generator
these are good tools to check how your password is secure:
https://password.kaspersky.com/
https://lastpass.com/howsecure.php
Good one dear.
Thank u for sharing KB's....
It's not exactly that case. Google Search bar does transfer the data you type there, these tools do not. This means it is not important whether you use HTTP or HTTPS, your password is checked only within the process of your browser using Javascript. In my opinion this password checker is the best. Besides brute-force calculations it can check your password against dictionary words including some mutations and chaining. As we are talking about HTTP and HTTPS, this one also do not send your password to the server for brute-force analyzes, but does so when you want to use that dictionary check. Instead of HTTPS, an encryption is being used to hide your password from sniffing attackers. However, it is mentioned there that this is prone to MITM attacks and thus less secure than HTTPS. It would be better if it used HTTPS.
Thank you for sharing.
Since their release of this tool and before that the strength checker used for Hotmail / Live accounts has always felt lacking. With any long word, you get the strong grading. Google version is only slightly better.
The site howsecureismypassword.net' look very nice and explains it easily. My personal preference has always been http://www.passwordmeter.com/. They provide the source code that you can download and run manually. Why, you might ask? Just like Googles search bar, every keystroke you input could be recorded by the owner of the website, improving the attacks of the bad guys.
Unfortunately, they all seem to measure different criteria. This one only shows the time required, but that time is way different to howsecureismypassword.net
Bonus points for those noticing that all three sites use normal HTTP instead of HTTPS to encrypt your key strokes.
This link is very nice dear. Specally "How secure is mypassword".