Password Generation Guide
Why Strong Passwords Matter
Your passwords are the keys to your digital life. A weak password puts your email, banking, social media, and personal data at risk. When one service is breached, hackers use the stolen passwords to attack your other accounts. A strong, unique password for each account is your best defense.
What Makes a Password Strong?
A strong password has four key characteristics:
- Length: At least 12 characters, preferably 16 or more. Longer passwords are exponentially harder to crack.
- Variety: Mix uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols. This increases the number of possible combinations.
- Randomness: Avoid patterns, dictionary words, or personal information. Random passwords are impossible to guess.
- Uniqueness: Never reuse the same password across multiple accounts. If one service is breached, all your accounts using that password are compromised.
How retrokey Helps
retrokey generates cryptographically secure random passwords in seconds. You control the length and character types, and the tool instantly shows you the password strength. Here's how to use it:
Step 1: Choose Your Length
Use the length slider to set your password length. Most services accept 12-16 characters. For high-security accounts (email, banking), use 16+ characters. The longer the password, the stronger it is.
Step 2: Select Character Types
Toggle on the character types you want: uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols. Most services support all four. If a service has restrictions, you can disable specific types.
Step 3: Check the Strength Meter
The strength meter shows you how secure your password is based on length and variety. Aim for "STRONG" (green) for important accounts.
Step 4: Copy and Use
Click the password display to copy it to your clipboard. Paste it into the password field on the service you're signing up for.
Password Strength Levels
retrokey shows three strength levels:
- WEAK (Red): Short passwords or limited character variety. Not recommended for important accounts.
- MEDIUM (Amber): Decent length and variety. Acceptable for low-security accounts.
- STRONG (Green): Long password with full character variety. Recommended for all accounts, especially email and banking.
Best Practices
- Use a password manager: Store your generated passwords in a password manager like Bitwarden, 1Password, or LastPass. Never reuse passwords.
- Enable two-factor authentication: Even if your password is compromised, 2FA protects your account.
- Update regularly: Change passwords for important accounts every 3-6 months, or immediately if you suspect a breach.
- Never share passwords: Don't share passwords via email, chat, or phone. Use a password manager to securely share access when needed.
- Check for breaches: Use Have I Been Pwned to see if your email has been in a known breach.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Reusing passwords: If one service is breached, all your accounts using that password are at risk.
- Using personal information: Birthdates, names, and addresses are easy to guess or find on social media.
- Simple patterns: Qwerty123, Password1, or 123456 are the first things hackers try.
- Writing passwords down: Physical notes can be lost or stolen. Use a password manager instead.
- Ignoring password requirements: If a service requires symbols or numbers, use them. These requirements exist for security.
Recommended Password Lengths by Account Type
- Email: 16+ characters (your email is the key to all other accounts)
- Banking: 16+ characters (protects your money)
- Social Media: 12-16 characters
- Shopping: 12-16 characters
- Streaming Services: 12 characters
- Throwaway Accounts: 8-12 characters (forums, temporary services)
Next Steps
Ready to generate a strong password? Go to the password generator and create your first secure password. Remember: use a password manager to store it, enable two-factor authentication, and never reuse passwords across accounts.