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Personally I can't remember most of my passwords that I have everywhere. So, I use a nice little freeware program called Password Safe. It keeps all my passwords. It will generate passwords for you given parameters, eg. How many characters to use, type of characters. And it reminds you when you need to change a password.
You can click on the website icon and it will open the website. You drag the person icon onto the user id field and it fills it for you. You drag the key icon to the password field and it puts the password there for you. Click Ok or what you need to an it opens the site.
Very handy for keeping track of passwords.
Of course you need have a good password for the app but that is only one password on your system.
Take a look at it. You may be interested you may not. Just an FYI.
Bob (Robert) Courtney | Support Services Technical Writer | Irvine, CA - 112064A | 1-949-926-3441, x63441
Any opinions expressed in the e-mail message you have received are those of the individual and not necessarily of Broadcom Corporation.
-----Original Message-----
From: techwr-l-bounces+courtney=broadcom -dot- com -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com [mailto:techwr-l-bounces+courtney=broadcom -dot- com -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com] On Behalf Of McLauchlan, Kevin
Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2012 8:27 AM
To: Andrew Warren; Lauren; techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com
Subject: RE: OT: LinkedIn Hacked
Andrew Warren wrote:
>
> 1. Your credit cards, cash, and keys to your house and car are
> presumably as valuable to you as your LinkedIn password. If your purse
> or pocket is safe enough for those things, it's also safe enough to
> hold a sheet of paper or a small notebook containing all your usernames
> and passwords. If your desk at home is safe enough to hold credit-card
> and bank statements, your PC with all your financial records on it,
> etc., then it too is safe enough for a small notebook.
You need two copies, at least. One should be in a safe deposit box.
I think I'll finally get around to doing this...
I think the relative number of all working persons, retired
persons, and students, who wear suits all day, is small and
getting smaller, so for 50% of you (the men... women tend to
have purses) chances are your paper or notebook will
be in your pants pocket, subject to body heat, humidity,
and friction. It will slowly turn to pocket lint. Long before
it gets there, it will lose legibility of some important notes.
At home, the relative safety of your desktop or drawer is
a matter between you and your spouse, your children, your
visitors, your children's visitors, any external services
you contract, such as cleaning, care visits for your elderly
parent, etc.
Your spouse and children are not likely to make much of
your credit-card and bank statements... but when the pre-teens
and teens get nosy and maybe find your pron collection...
er.... ah... did I say that out loud? Well, that'll have
a different kind of consequence.
But more to the point, many of us already have "protection"
in the form of a service with one-or-more credit-card
providers such that you call one number in case your wallet
is stolen. They take care of all of your accounts, even with
competitors, sending alerts, putting stops on transactions,
processing changes to security (passwords, check questions,
etc.) You can be back in business with all your financial
and utilities and other accounts within days or weeks.
But I'm not aware of any such service that'll do the same
for the dozens or hundreds of web-sites and forums and
organizations you might have joined over the years (you
did finally give in and register so you could see NY Times
articles, didn't you?)
If you had a fire or other disaster at your house, there's
a good chance that the notebook and its contents would
still be safe in a safe deposit box. Not infallible,
but a good chance that a fire in your home would leave
the bank's safe intact.
Just sayin' . . .
-k
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