Secure Your Digital Life In The Age Of AI Risks
Secure Your Digital Life In The Age Of AI Risks
Author: Alex Vakulov, Contributor
Published on: 2025-03-04 14:11:16
Source: Forbes – Innovation
Disclaimer:All rights are owned by the respective creators. No copyright infringement is intended.
Password box in Internet Browser on Computer Screen
Do you think your trusty 8-character password is safe? In the age of AI, that might be wishful thinking. Recent advances in artificial intelligence are giving hackers superpowers to crack and steal account credentials. Researchers have demonstrated that AI can accurately guess passwords just by listening to your keystrokes. By analyzing the sound of typing over Zoom, the system achieved over 90% accuracy in some cases.
And AI-driven password cracking tools can run millions of guess attempts lightning-fast, often defeating weak passwords in minutes. It is no surprise, then, that stolen or weak passwords contribute to about 80% of breaches.
The old password model has outlived its usefulness. As cyber threats get smarter, it is time for consumers to do the same.
AI Makes Cracking Passwords Easier Than Ever
Gone are the days when a hacker had to manually try “password123” or use basic tools to brute-force your account. Now, AI algorithms can crack passwords with frightening speed and sophistication. For example, according to Security Hero, AI-powered tools like PassGAN can crack 51% of common passwords in less than a minute.
Machine learning models can also automate “credential stuffing” attacks (trying breached passwords on other sites) much faster and more intelligently.
The expanding power of AI means that shorter, simpler passwords (or anything that is a dictionary word or common phrase) can be cracked almost instantly. In short, if your passwords are weak or reused, assume that AI can and will figure them out.
Why Traditional Logins Do Not Cut It
Overreliance on memorized passwords is increasingly seen as a weak link. Human-created passwords tend to be predictable—people often use pet names, birthdays, or variations of common words. Attackers know this, and AI only turbocharges their ability to guess those patterns.
Even security measures like security questions or SMS one-time codes have been proven to be vulnerable. And if a major password manager can be breached, it raises the question: why rely on passwords alone?
This issue is leading tech companies to develop “passwordless” solutions that do not depend on humans remembering secret strings. It is critical to recognize that clinging to old habits like simple passwords or reusing logins is dangerous. Threat actors armed with AI and billions of leaked credentials will eventually crack those codes. It is time to embrace stronger authentication methods that can withstand modern attacks.
Passkeys, Biometrics, And Beyond
So what is the alternative? Fortunately, more secure and user-friendly options are emerging and available right now. One major advancement is the adoption of passkeys—a technology championed by the FIDO Alliance and now supported by Apple, Google, and Microsoft. Passkeys replace passwords with cryptographic key pairs tied to your devices (often unlocked via your fingerprint or face ID). They are resistant to phishing and password cracking because there is no static password to steal or guess.
Alongside passkeys, biometric authentication (your face, voice, or fingerprint) and hardware tokens are gaining traction. These methods mean an attacker cannot break in unless they are you or physically possess your device. Even when biometrics are used, they are often combined with device-based cryptography to ensure that a deepfake of your voice alone will not grant access.
Tech companies are rapidly rolling out these features: Windows Hello, Apple Passkeys in iCloud Keychain, and Google’s passwordless sign-ins are examples. Enabling them on your accounts can shut out even AI-powered intruders who might have guessed or stolen your old passwords.
6 Practical Steps To Protect Your Digital Life
You do not need to be a tech guru to significantly boost your security against AI-era threats. Start with the basics and layer up:
- Use a password manager – Let it generate long, random, unique passwords for each account. This defeats brute-force guessing because each password is complex and unrelated. Even powerful AI struggles to crack a 16-character truly random string, especially if it is unique per website.
- Enable Multi-Factor Authentication – This is critical. MFA means even if an attacker gets your password, they still need that second factor (like your phone or fingerprint). Apps like Google Authenticator are safer than SMS texts (which can be hijacked).
- Upgrade to passkeys/biometrics – Where available, set up passkeys or biometric logins.
- Be stingy with personal info – Minimize what you share on social media (birthdates, pet names, schools) because AI tools can scrape that data to guess your security answers or passwords. Also, protect your biometric data – for example, do not upload your face ID or fingerprint to sketchy apps since cloning your identity is a growing risk with AI.
- Stay alert to phishing – Even the best authentication can be undermined if you are tricked into giving away access. AI-crafted phishing is a significant threat. Keep that skepticism handy. Do not click strange links, verify requests, and regularly check account activity.
- Keep software/devices up to date – This ensures you have the latest security improvements (including any AI-driven protections your OS or security apps use to counter new threats).
Disclaimer: All rights are owned by the respective creators. No copyright infringement is intended.