Even if it’s not ‘123456,’ change your password
Here are the stories we're reading and numbers we're watching Wednesday.
19
The age Rep. Aaron Schock was elected to the Peoria school board, shortly after graduating. He would become board president at 22 and eventually represent Peoria’s district as one of the youngest lawmakers on Capitol Hill. Schock resigned Tuesday amid a spending probe, and the Washington Post has traced the congressman’s rapid rise and the never-too-big attitude that may have been his undoing.
9 minutes
The gap between when students were alerted to a shooting at Florida State University via Yik Yak and when the school’s emergency notification came through. The app, popular on college campuses, is part of a theme the Marketplace Tech team has seen running through SXSW Interactive this year: Users want more than just data privacy, they value anonymity too.
123456
Speaking of privacy, that’s the most common password among 15 million put online by a security analyst and Russian hackers, according to a WP Engine analysis reported by Quartz. That seems obvious, but interestingly that pattern of keystrokes is also the most common, accounting for passwords like “qwerty,” “asdfgh” and any other combination of six adjacent keys to the right. Here are the other most common combinations:
Courtesy:WP Engine via Quartz
20-24 years
The age group researchers at Syracuse University found a sizeable gap in employment between veterans and non-vets. There’s plenty of anecdotal evidence showing veterans from the post-9/11 era have more trouble finding employment, Marketplace’s Dan Weissmann learned hard numbers are difficult to come by.