Two Factor Authentication (hope you have a smart phone)
Get used to it, more and more secure sites are recommending this to help insure the security of their business files, AND customer information.
Amazon? what is taking you so long.
Get used to it, more and more secure sites are recommending this to help insure the security of their business files, AND customer information.
Amazon? what is taking you so long.
i*ght6 – is a pretty impressive password – Good Luck Remembering it in 5 minutes. And a well informed, computer literate 9th grader could crack it in about 60 minutes.
(Seriously if you think 9th graders are the ones we should be concerned about, read this Article https://www.csoonline.com/article/3177438/10-types-of-hackers-and-how-theyll-harm-you.html
BusinessCustomer101 – this is another impressive password…and I bet you will remember it tomorrow. Why is it better then the first one? It is longer and will take that nasty hacker years to break..so they won’t!
Some of you might appreciate this but I wonder if its for the right reasons, the trend emerging from Security Experts Best Practices indicates that asking users to change their passwords periodically might not be a good idea….MUNIS users know what I am talking about.
If an end user is staring at a PC with an issue, and they have the slightest bit of doubt about taking an action – they shouldn’t take that action. Although not common, taking the wrong action could have catastrophic consequences. Rather than create additional problems, users should always call IT when they don’t know what to do. By default, they may not know this.
Save us both a lot of trouble, please call this office if you need help.