Use longer passwords
A longer password raises brute-force cost quickly. Start at 16 characters or more.
P@ssw0rd_G3n3r4t0r!
Length, variety, and uniqueness matter more than memorizing clever patterns.
A longer password raises brute-force cost quickly. Start at 16 characters or more.
Combine uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols to reduce predictability.
Do not reuse the same password across accounts. Store them in a password manager.
Length, variety, and uniqueness matter more than memorizing clever patterns.
Yes. Passwords are generated locally in the browser and are not sent to a remote service.
Human-made passwords are usually more predictable. A generator produces higher-entropy results.
Yes. Using a different password for every account reduces the blast radius of a leak.
Good passwords are long, random, and use a broad set of characters without obvious patterns.
Use at least 16 characters when possible. Longer passwords generally provide better protection.
Rotate them when an account is exposed, reused, or part of a security incident. Otherwise, focus on uniqueness and strong storage.