It might as well have been “password.”

A probe into the broad daylight heist at the Louvre revealed the world-renowned museum had used a mind-bloggingly weak password for its core security systems, according to a report.

France’s National Cybersecurity Agency was able to access a server managing the museum’s video surveillance using the ridiculously easy password, “LOUVRE,” according to confidential documents obtained by Libération .

France’s National Cybersecurity Agency was able to access a server managing the museum’s video surveillance using the ridiculously easy password, “LOUVRE.” REUTERS

The namesake password was first revealed by the agency in a 2014 audit. Subsequent audits found “serious shortcomings” in the Paris museum’s security systems — including the use of two-dec

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