Here's how to safeguard the four-digit gateways to your money and cellphone :
- Never use your birthdate as a PIN. The bad guys know people do this. A quick glance at the driver's license or other ID lets thieves access money at an ATM with about one in 15 stolen wallets, according to British researchers.
- Don't use a string of numbers such as 1234 or 1111. These rank as the first and fourth most common iPhone PINs.
- Avoid your birth year --- or any year from 1950 onward, says Joseph Bonneau of the University of Cambridge, who coauthored the British study.
- Avoid the last four digits of your Social Security number.
- Your phone number? The birthdate of a child or grandchild? Give them a pass. With an online search of public records, phone directories or newspaper announcements, an Internet-savvy scoundrel can get that information.
- The street or apartment number of your home, printed on your driver's license, is also easily found. So, what numbers should you use? The bank-assigned one is typically "a safe choice," says Bonneau, but consider these other smart strategies :
- Sequences from a childhood phone number or a long-unused company ID are good choices, as long as they're no longer listed anywhere, says Bonneau. Also consider numbers you now dial frequently, but are hard to trace to you, such as a pizza shop.
- Theives will have a hard time guessing that your favorite holiday is Halloween (1031). Also consider PIN-izing a momentous event in your personal history such as the date you hit that game-winning home run in Little League.
- If you use a word for your PIN, how about basing it on a random phrase that you can recall, such as 6488 for "now is the time" (NITT).
- Four-digit PINs are standard, but go longer if you're allowed. The more digits, the harder to crack.
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