NET-180 Week 4: Chapter 5
Note: The title refers to the chapter listings in the syllabus.
This week I have been reminded the importance of strong passwords or passphrases with many characters (8 is a minimum, but more is better), and many different types of characters, such as numbers and exclamation points, ampersands, etc. I also learned about how to actually use a picture password, which I hadn't used since I did not have a touchscreen or trackpad on any Windows PC I have. It just consists of drawing some kind of pattern on a picture instead of typing something. Picture passwords are good for touchscreen devices (a variant of them seem to be quite popular on Android), but can be difficult to draw with a mouse. I already had learned about using PINs as a quick login method if you don't want to type a long password every time you lock the screen of you device, but do want to leave it locked if you're leaving it unattended. So far I use a PIN on one Windows PC at the moment, since I can quickly type it in to unlock it. I also learned that it is possible for an administrator to set up PC password policies with various requirements, such as setting an interval after which a password must be changed, which is not really surprising. I also learned more about BitLocker, such as how to set it up.
https://www.windowscentral.com/how-use-bitlocker-encryption-windows-10
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitLocker
This week I have been reminded the importance of strong passwords or passphrases with many characters (8 is a minimum, but more is better), and many different types of characters, such as numbers and exclamation points, ampersands, etc. I also learned about how to actually use a picture password, which I hadn't used since I did not have a touchscreen or trackpad on any Windows PC I have. It just consists of drawing some kind of pattern on a picture instead of typing something. Picture passwords are good for touchscreen devices (a variant of them seem to be quite popular on Android), but can be difficult to draw with a mouse. I already had learned about using PINs as a quick login method if you don't want to type a long password every time you lock the screen of you device, but do want to leave it locked if you're leaving it unattended. So far I use a PIN on one Windows PC at the moment, since I can quickly type it in to unlock it. I also learned that it is possible for an administrator to set up PC password policies with various requirements, such as setting an interval after which a password must be changed, which is not really surprising. I also learned more about BitLocker, such as how to set it up.
https://www.windowscentral.com/how-use-bitlocker-encryption-windows-10
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitLocker
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