Usernames You Should Never Use

Project Honey Pot Statistics

Top Dictionary Attacker Usernames 

Usernames Occurences
1. 77,453
2. 28,480
3. 28,142
4. 28,044
5. 27,940
6. 27,816
7. 27,726
8. 27,713
9. 26,793
10. 25,407
11. 19,405
12. 18,229
13. 17,901
14. 15,393
15. 12,220
16. 5,148
17. 2,674
18. 1,682
19. 1,535
20. 1,384
21. 1,375
22. 1,107
23. 1,013
24. 950
25. 948
26. 907
27. 780
28. 755
29. 752
30. 746
31. 745
32. 743
33. 740
34. 739
35. 737
36. 734
37. 732
38. 731
39. 730
40. 724
41. 724
42. 720
43. 719
44. 717
45. 716
46. 715
47. 715
48. 710
49. 706
50. 702
51. 700
52. 700
53. 699
54. 694
55. 693
56. 687
57. 686
58. 686
59. 685
60. 684
61. 680
62. 676
63. 675
64. 674
65. 673
66. 670
67. 669
68. 669
69. 668
70. 666
71. 665
72. 663
73. 661
74. 661
75. 661
76. 660
77. 659
78. 659
79. 656
80. 656
81. 655
82. 655
83. 654
84. 652
85. 652
86. 651
87. 650
88. 649
89. 648
90. 646
91. 645
92. 645
93. 644
94. 644
95. 643
96. 641
97. 641
98. 641
99. 640
100. 640

Email addresses are made up of two parts: a username and a domain. The username comes before the @ sign, the domain comes after the at sign (e.g., for the address bob@exampledomain.com, “bob” is the username, “exampledomain.com” is the domain). Spammers often try and guess email addresses by trying common usernames. These guessing games are known as a “dictionary attack.” Above is a list of the top-100 usernames guessed by spammers.

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