Millions of Keyboard Walk Patterns Found in Compromised Passwords

Today, the Specops Software research team revealed the results of their latest findings on the use of keyboard walk patterns in compromised passwords. The top keyboard walk pattern found in compromised password was ‘qwert’, followed by ‘qwerty’ which found in compromised passwords more than 1 million times.


Keyboard walk patterns are passwords compromised of keys that are located next to each other on the user’s keyboard.


The Specops team analysed an 800 million password subset of the largest Breached Password Protection database, which includes over three billion breached passwords.


To carry out the research, the Specops research team used a generator to create a list of common keyboard walk patterns. The Specops team only looked for patterns that included 5 characters or more, as well as phrases that occur outside of ‘normal’ language.


The words generated came from three common (Latin alphabet) keyboard layouts:


Qwerty: common in America and many regions across Europe (with slight modifications)
Azerty: mostly used in France and Belgium
Qwertz: Widely used in Germany and Central European countries

The top Querty keyboard walk pattern found in compromised passwords was qwerty, which was found over 1 million times. This was followed by qwert, werty, asdfg.


The top three Azerty keyboard walk patterns found in compromised passwords were xcvbn (found over 143,000 times), asdfg, and tress.


Similarly, the top three Quertz keyboard walk patterns found in compromised articles were qwert (found over 1.4 million times), asdfg, and xcvbnm.


“We find keyboard walk patterns in compromised password data because users are human,” said Darren James, Senior Product Manager at Specops Software. “But the danger is that attackers also know this. Any IT team looking to shore up ..

Support the originator by clicking the read the rest link below.