In general, the strongest passwords are sufficiently long, randomly generated and contain no words in any language. Most others are weak because of the cracking methods programmed into password cracking tools. The three main methods used are:
Memorable password selection using a scheme the crackers haven't already thought of is hard. Their tools nearly always start with the most basic approach: the dictionary attack. After a few seconds of comparing encrypted variants of every word in the dictionary, combinations are tried. You jam two words together, say "dogskirt"? Not good enough; this one is trivial. You include a number, say "dogskirt2"? That one will keep the cracker busy a bit longer, but again, not long enough. Spell it backwards? Nope, still trivial. Foreign word? Wrong again!
When all else fails, cracking software will resort to brute-force methods and sufficient password length becomes critical. Given enough time, your password will be cracked. This is best you can hope for!
Most people would be surprised to learn that their password had been cracked. Yet many large site administrators crack several passwords per day while performing routine security audits. If the good guys can discover your password -- and they will tell you to change it, of course -- think about what the bad guys might have discovered!
Always use strong passwords and change them often!
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