Britain, Consumer Affairs, European Union, Government, Research, Society, Technology

Research reveals the most commonly used PIN numbers…

10 per cent of PINs can be guessed in just one attempt

Research has revealed that one in ten PINs can be correctly guessed first time. The most commonly used numbers have been revealed, with 10% of the population still using 1234.

Researchers found 17 per cent of people in Europe have suffered identity fraud. Credit card fraud cost the UK more than £388 million in 2012.

Despite a rise in credit card fraud, the most commonly-used PIN is still 1234, with 1111 and 0000 coming in second and third.

Studies have shown that one in ten codes is so obvious that it would take criminals just one attempt to guess it correctly, while more than a quarter of the codes are used so often they can be guessed in fewer than 20 attempts.

Researchers from DataGenetics, a technology consultancy, analysed 3.4 million four-digit codes and found that many people use birth years as PINs, making it even easier for hackers to guess a code simply by finding out a person’s age from online accounts.

Additional research carried out by security experts McAfee found that 17 per cent of people in Europe have been victims of credit card fraud, at a cost of £1,076 per person.

The total cost of credit card fraud in the UK last year from criminals hacking and cloning cards was £42.1 million and the total amount of fraud committed through all credit card-related crimes was £388 million.

There are 10,000 possible combinations for four-digit PIN codes using 0 to 9.

The majority of PINs in the DataGenetics list began with the number one, which may be due to the popularity of using birth years. Zero and two were also popular. The higher the number, the lower its frequency.

The majority of PINs in the DataGenetics list began with the number one, which may be due to the popularity of using birth years. Zero and two were also popular. The higher the number, the lower its frequency.

DataGenetics unlocks data held in large databases. In producing its findings it used data from previously released password tables and security breaches. By combining the password databases, researchers filtered the results to show just four-digit numbers and were able to analyse 3.4 million four-digit passwords.

They discovered that all of the possible 10,000 combinations – from 0000 to 9999 – were found in the data list.

The most popular password was 1234, but the amount of times this number occurred ‘staggered’ the researchers – almost 11 per cent of the 3.4 million passwords were 1234.

This PIN was also more popular than the 4,200 codes at the bottom of the list combined.

The next most popular 4-digit PIN was 1111, used more than 6 per cent of times.

Data Genetics compiled a list of the top 20 passwords and found that 26.83 per cent of all the passwords in the list could be guessed by attempting these 20 combinations.

The researchers said:

… Statistically, with 10,000 possible combinations, if passwords were uniformly randomly distributed, we would expect these twenty passwords to account for just 0.2 per cent of the total, not the 26.83 per cent encountered.

The more popular password selections dominate the frequency tables and the study found that 10 per cent of PINs could be guessed correctly first time.

More than 20 per cent could be guessed by using just five attempts and statistically, one third of all codes could be guessed by trying just 61 distinct combinations.

The data found that the least-used code was 8068 with just 25 appearances in 3.4 million – far fewer than random distribution would predict.

The researchers also noted that many of the high-frequency PINs could be interpreted as years because many began with 19, for example, 1984, 1967 and so on.

This could be a birth year or anniversary and if a hacker can guess someone’s age, or even obtain it through birth records or online accounts, for example, they could make an educated guess at the PIN.

The majority of PINs in the DataGenetics list began with the number one, which may be due to the popularity of using birth years.

The numbers zero and two were also popular.

The research found that the higher the number from 0-9, the lower its frequency at the start of the code.

Another study by Google Apps found that a pet’s name is the most common online password.

As many as one in six people use their pet’s name as a password.

One is six Britons admitted accessing someone else’s account by guessing the password, with partners the most common target.

TOP 10 POPULAR PINS

  1. 1234
  2. 1111
  3. 0000
  4. 1212
  5. 7777
  6. 1004
  7. 2000
  8. 4444
  9. 2222
  10. 6969
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Britain, Consumer Affairs, Economic, Government, Politics

Consumer Affairs: Payday loan firms…

PAYDAY loan firms will not be banned from charging excessively high interest rates, despite a promised Government crackdown on sharp practices in the industry.

Leading companies were summoned for talks in Whitehall with Consumer Affairs Minister Jo Swinson MP, today, amid a myriad of concerns that they are driving desperate families to financial ruin.

In a toughly-worded intervention, Miss Swinson, the Member of Parliament for East Dunbartonshire, said she is determined to curb ‘irresponsible behaviour which exploits vulnerable consumers in financial strife’.

The minister of state confirmed payday loan firms such as Wonga will not be ordered to cut their interest rates. The LibDem MP cited concerns that people could be forced into borrowing from even shadier loan sharks.

Critics of payday loan firms insist that the exorbitant interest rates, which can reach 5,000 per cent a year, are the root cause of misery suffered by hundreds of thousands of people taking out payday loans.

Recently, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, called for a legal cap on payday lenders and the level of interest they are allowed to charge.

The Archbishop said:

… Once you have taken out the loan, it is difficult to get out of the cycle. With the rates offered, simply paying off the interest becomes a struggle.

Consumer organisation Which? published a study showing a million families a month are forced to take out payday loans. It found some 400,000 people take out the high interest loans to pay for essentials such as food and fuel. A further 240,000 need the cash to pay existing loans.

Which? says that almost half of the people taking out payday loans could not cover their repayments, forcing them deeper into debt as their ‘short-term’ loans are ‘rolled over’, with fresh interest added.

The Whitehall summit comes days after the £2 billion industry was referred by the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) to the Competition Commission. It will have the power to ban or limit the industry’s products, but will take up to 18 months to report.

It is understood the OFT has given the 50 lenders until the end of July to respond to calls for them to clean up their act or face closure. Five firms have since surrendered their licence, but only 20 have responded to date.

Labour MP Stella Creasy accused ministers of being too cosy with the industry. She said:

… Having a summit about payday lending without talking about capping interest rates is like discussing arson without mentioning matches.

In reply that interest rates should be capped, Miss Swinson said that could shut down short-term loans and force people towards illegal loan sharks or by taking other extreme measures. She has suggested, though, that the focus should be on limiting the ease with which loans are ‘rolled over’.

The Consumers Affairs Minister also raised concerns about automatic payment systems that let lenders raid bank accounts of clients to claw back money they are owed.

COMMENT

Payday lenders are notorious by the way in which they operate and the rates they charge should be capped. This opinion is based on the assumption that lending money to people with poor credit histories at sky-high interest rates is wrong. Unfortunately, the problem of unsecured lending is a warren of complexity.

The empirical evidence elsewhere is important to consider. In many other countries, including France, Germany, Australia and Japan, and in many states in America and provinces in Canada, interest rates are capped at a ceiling – such as 36 or 48 per cent a year. But this means that companies cease to offer loans to risky customers, who are then forced into the hands of illegal loan sharks, often run by organised crime gangs. Arguably, it is better to have payday lending in the legal economy, where it can at least be regulated, than to drive it into the criminal underworld.

Stella Creasy MP has campaigned tenaciously against irresponsible lending. She has said that the problems with a rate cap should not mean that we cannot act. Rather, she says, we must work harder and learn from others how best to act. She has proposed a cap on total repayments to try and break the cycle on compound interest and rollover debts that end up many times the size of the original loan. A way needs to be found without choking off the legitimate market for emergency short-term borrowing.

This, however, should be just the start of a programme of reforms to limit abuses in the payday-loan market. Further issues should be addressed by the Competition Commission following the investigation launched last week.

The Commission’s task is to look at unfair competitive practices that are suspected of giving borrowers a bad deal, such as convoluted information about interest rates and how they are applied. Lenders are also known to make it hard for borrowers to switch to a rival company.

A plethora of reforms are needed within the payday-loan industry. Any programme of serious reform should start first with the underlying causes of problem borrowing. Advertising, for example, should be restricted, on similar principles that have already been applied to the advertising of alcohol and tobacco. Adverts for payday loans could carry information about where to get debt advice. Payday lenders could be required, too, in paying a levy to fund helplines and services to help with addictive and self-destructive behaviour that leads to indebtedness in the first place, or to support the work of credit unions.

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