Should you block compromised passwords?

Published
Aug 11, 2023
Written by
Benjamin Crozat
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In today’s cyber world, passwords are the main safeguard for user accounts. Yet the problem lies in users reusing the same passwords across various sites.

If one of these sites is compromised, it results in a domino effect of breaches.

One way to avert this is by blocking compromised or ‘pwned’ passwords through services such as Pwned Passwords. Laravel’s password validation rule, uncompromised(), assists with this.

However, it is important to expand beyond merely implementing the rule, by teaching users about securing their passwords, providing resources, developing extra authentication measures, and possibly implementing SMS Multi-Factor Authentication for non-tech savvy users.

About Benjamin Crozat
Benjamin Crozat

Hi! I’m from the South of France and I’ve been a self-taught web developer since 2006. When I started learning PHP and JavaScript, PHP 4 was still widely used, Internet Explorer 6 ruled the world, and we used DHTML to add falling snow on websites.

Being able to educate myself for free on the web changed my life for the better. Giving back to the community was a natural direction in my career and I truly enjoy it.

Therefore, I decided to take action:

  1. I launched this blog in September 2022 with the goal to be in everyone’s Google search. I get more than tens of thousands of monthly clicks from it and even more visits overall (my analytics dashboard is public by the way).
  2. I also started growing my X (formerly Twitter) account at the same time, which has now over 7,000 followers.
  3. All the content I write is free thanks to my sponsors.

I also want to be completely free with my time and make a living with my own products. In April 2024, I launched Nobinge, a tool to summarize and chat with your content, including YouTube videos.

Believe me, I’m just getting started!

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