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Microsoft Found 44 Million Leaked Passwords – How to Pick a Strong Password

Recently Microsoft published about how they have found 44 million Microsoft account passwords matching with those with leaked credentials collected through various data breaches in the past. This is a very alarming number of passwords and Microsoft is now forcibly resetting the passwords of those Microsoft accounts having credentials matching with the databases of known data breaches.

Microsoft identity threat research team did not match the plain text passwords because those are not available to Microsoft. Instead, they matched the password hashes with the hashes available in the huge databases of various breaches from multiple sources. If there was a match then it basically means that the password hashes have been leaked by the hackers.

If your Microsoft account has been found among these 44 million, then you might be forced to reset your account passwords. You should remember some points when setting up a new password:

In addition to using a very strong password using the tips above, you should also enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) which can foil the attempts of anyone breaking into your account even if they know your login credentials. Usually MFA requires you to setup an authentication app on your smartphone that generates time based unique codes that must be entered at login in addition to the usual credentials (username and password). You can begin by enabling two-step verification for Microsoft accounts.

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