Over 25 years ago, I headed off to college, oppened a bank account, and was issued a newfangled thing called an ATM card; it required me to have something called a PIN, four digits that I had to remember. Later, I opened an account on with the school's computer system -- kind of weird at the time, since I was a liberal arts major, but it beat using my typewriter -- and I had to have a password.
And for 15 years thereafter, those were the sum total of my password needs: one ATM pin, one university logon.
But now! Oy! Four passwords for the four systems I use daily at work -- and they all have to be changed every six months; at least five-other work-related passwords, mostly for stuff related to the HR system, some of which also have to be changed every six months; 3 passwords for our 3 on-line banking sites, which keep having to be changed as they "improve" the sites; 2 passwords for the on-line interface to our credit card accounts; and that's just the stuff that can't be cookied, like Poly, Amazon, and my home email account.
I assume we're all in the same boat. What gets me is that "good" security is supposed to involve (1) using different paswords for different accounts; (2) changing passwords frequently; and (3) never writing your passwords down.
As far as I can tell, you'd have to be Rainman to comply with that in contemporary life.
So -- without giving anything away, of course -- how do you manage your passwords?
And for 15 years thereafter, those were the sum total of my password needs: one ATM pin, one university logon.
But now! Oy! Four passwords for the four systems I use daily at work -- and they all have to be changed every six months; at least five-other work-related passwords, mostly for stuff related to the HR system, some of which also have to be changed every six months; 3 passwords for our 3 on-line banking sites, which keep having to be changed as they "improve" the sites; 2 passwords for the on-line interface to our credit card accounts; and that's just the stuff that can't be cookied, like Poly, Amazon, and my home email account.
I assume we're all in the same boat. What gets me is that "good" security is supposed to involve (1) using different paswords for different accounts; (2) changing passwords frequently; and (3) never writing your passwords down.
As far as I can tell, you'd have to be Rainman to comply with that in contemporary life.
So -- without giving anything away, of course -- how do you manage your passwords?
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