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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
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<page xmlns="http://projectmallard.org/1.0/" type="topic" style="tip" id="user-goodpassword" xml:lang="id">
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<link type="guide" xref="user-accounts#passwords"/>
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<desc>Use longer, more complicated passwords.</desc>
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<revision pkgversion="3.4.0" date="2012-02-19" status="review"/>
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<name>Projek Dokumentasi GNOME</name>
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<email>gnome-doc-list@gnome.org</email>
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<credit type="author">
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<name>Phil Bull</name>
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<email>philbull@gmail.com</email>
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<credit type="author">
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<name>Tiffany Antopolski</name>
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<email>tiffany.antopolski@gmail.com</email>
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<credit type="editor">
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<name>Michael Hill</name>
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<email>mdhillca@gmail.com</email>
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<include xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" href="legal.xml"/>
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<mal:credit xmlns:mal="http://projectmallard.org/1.0/" type="translator copyright">
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<mal:name>Andika Triwidada</mal:name>
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<mal:email>andika@gmail.com</mal:email>
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<mal:years>2011, 2012</mal:years>
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<title>Pilih sandi yang aman</title>
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<note style="important">
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Make your passwords easy enough for you to remember, but very difficult for
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others (including computer programs) to guess.
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<p>Choosing a good password will help to keep your computer safe. If your
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password is easy to guess, someone may figure it out and gain access to your
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personal information.</p>
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<p>People could even use computers to systematically try to guess your
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password, so even one that would be difficult for a human to guess might be
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extremely easy for a computer program to crack. Here are some tips for choosing
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<p>Use a mixture of upper-case and lower-case letters, numbers, symbols and
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spaces in the password. This makes it more difficult to guess; there are more
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symbols from which to choose, meaning more possible passwords that someone
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would have to check when trying to guess yours.</p>
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<p>A good method for choosing a password is to take the first letter of each
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word in a phrase that you can remember. The phrase could be the name of a
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movie, a book, a song or an album. For example, "Flatland: A Romance of Many
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Dimensions" would become F:ARoMD or faromd or f: aromd.</p>
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<p>Make your password as long as possible. The more characters it contains,
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the longer it should take for a person or computer to guess it.</p>
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<p>Do not use any words that appear in a standard dictionary in any language.
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Password crackers will try these first. The most common password is
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"password" -- people can guess passwords like this very quickly!</p>
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<p>Do not use any personal information such as a date, license plate number,
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or any family member's name.</p>
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<p>Do not use any nouns. </p>
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<p>Choose a password that can be typed quickly, to decrease the chances of
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someone being able to make out what you have typed if they happen to be
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<p>Never write your passwords down anywhere. They can be easily found!</p>
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<p>Use different passwords for different things.</p>
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<p>Use different passwords for different accounts.</p>
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<p>If you use the same password for all of your accounts, anyone who guesses
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it will be able to access all of your accounts immediately.</p>
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<p>It can be difficult to remember lots of passwords, however. Though not as
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secure as using a different passwords for everything, it may be easier to use
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the same one for things that don't matter (like websites), and different ones
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for important things (like your online banking account and your email).</p>
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Change your passwords regularly.