According to PC Magazine's "2020's most common passwords are laughably insecure"[1] article, the top three passwords are 123456, 123456789 and picture1. What if one of them is your employee? Even if you had imposed constraints such as every password should have one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one number and a symbol, still people set passwords such as Password1!, P@ssword123 etc. It is very hard to control. Further, it is hard for them to remember random text passwords. On the top of it, they need to change the password every quarter. They have many applications. Even if they set hard passwords, perhaps they may repeat them on other systems. If employees set easy passwords like this then hackers can easily enter into your network. It costs a lot to companies and individuals.
One of the professors from MIT [2] says when people were asked to set security questions, they put security questions such as What is 2 plus 2? Therefore, these security questions are also another hole or weakest link in web security. Your mother name, father name, birthday, anniversary are all available on the internet through social media. Even though you have not put it there, your friends, children or relatives have put it or it can be inferred. A social media happy birthday wish will tell you when is your birthday?
KudilPass solves the above two problems. You need to remember only one password and it will give you passwords for all your applications they are strong and unique. Similarly, they will give strong and unique security answers.
Your company can change passwords every month, employees won't get frustrated if you give them KudilPass because all that they need to know is only one password. Rest is taken care of by KudilPass.
Example:
Let us say an example.com employee set his password is 123456 to KudilPass, still he will get/send password to employee.com as follows. (Assumes the password length is set to 44)
2mk5!cS8vNUaOzl3hjYjN6ULYnGFf9Vxr0akGjQnWfUe
If password length is set to 16, it will be
2mk5!cS8vNUaOzl3
With this, you don't need to think about weak password issue.
Reference:
Sherin Shibu 2020, "2020's most common passwords are laughably insecure", Nov 18, 2020, https://pcmag.com/news/2020s-most-common-passwords-are-laughably-insecure.
Professor James Mickens, "Web Security Model", Posted on Mar 30,2017 in YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRJ_r8WF1Y0