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Why I Always Check Password Strength Before Using Any New Password

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Why I Always Check Password Strength Before Using Any New Password
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Sadique Mannan is the founder of BeingOptimist, sharing real-tested tech tutorials, monetization guides, and honest product reviews based on hands-on experience.

Most online security issues don’t start with sophisticated attacks.
They start with weak passwords.

Over time, I’ve realized that many people—including experienced internet users—still underestimate how predictable common passwords are. That’s why I’ve made it a habit to check password strength before using any new password, no matter how small the account feels.

This simple step has helped me avoid unnecessary risks.


Why “It Looks Strong” Isn’t Enough

A password can look strong to a human and still be weak for a machine.

Attackers don’t think the way we do. They use automated systems that:

  • Test common patterns

  • Try predictable variations

  • Exploit short or reused passwords

That’s why relying on instinct alone isn’t reliable.


What Password Strength Actually Tells You

Password strength is not a guarantee of safety.
It’s an indicator of resistance.

A strong password usually:

  • Is long enough to slow down guessing

  • Uses varied characters

  • Avoids obvious patterns or common words

Strength reduces risk. It doesn’t eliminate it.


My Personal Process for Checking Passwords

Before I use any password, I follow a simple routine:

  1. I test it using a browser-based password strength checker

  2. I review the strength level shown (weak, medium, strong)

  3. I read the suggestions provided

  4. I improve the password if needed

This takes only a few seconds, but it adds an important layer of awareness.


Why I Prefer Browser-Based Checkers

When dealing with passwords, privacy matters.

I only trust tools that:

  • Run locally in the browser

  • Don’t store or transmit passwords

  • Provide real-time feedback

If a tool doesn’t clearly explain this, I don’t use it.


A Common Mistake I See Often

People sometimes say:

“This password has worked fine for years.”

That doesn’t mean it’s strong.
It just means it hasn’t been tested yet.

Password strength should be checked before a problem happens, not after.


Why This Habit Is Worth Keeping

Checking password strength:

  • Takes seconds

  • Encourages better password habits

  • Reduces avoidable security risks

It’s one of the simplest security practices anyone can adopt.


Final Thought

Strong passwords aren’t about complexity—they’re about unpredictability and awareness.

Taking a moment to check password strength before using a password is a small step that makes a meaningful difference over time. Also don’t forget to read one of my guides that I published about How I Check If a Website Is Safe Before Clicking Any Link.


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