LooseSuits

Welcome to LooseSuits! Smart minds share big ideas.: Signup or Login Here
LooseSuits is proudly hosted by (mt) Media Temple.  We recommend them for your web hosting needs.
Clips: Popular Clips Upcoming Clips Notes: All Notes

The amount of sites that I have signed up to over the past few years is reaching the stage of insanity. I have so many accounts in different places I'm now forced to keep an address book with all login details etc.

For security reasons I choose to keep this in paper form, but I'm interested to hear how other people deal with this matter, what other solutions are there out there to manage login info?

I have three different login/password combos that I use for various things. Plus, everything is stored in my Mac's keychain, so even though I can't really remember every combo, I can find them if I need them.

How ironic. I have a post (more or less) prepared about this. I wasn't going to publish on a Sunday, but now I may have to ;-)

The gist? I have a certain 'key' only I know (obviously) and then use 'ciphers' already present on the site. It's not that confusing as it sounds, but you'd have to read the article.

I'll update this when it's ready. Mwahaha, linkbait!

;-)

Looking forward to the article Nils.

It's all in Camino's password manager. If I ever lose that, I'll be filling in a lot of forgotten password forms.

I keep most of them in MS OneNote 2007, and I password protect the page.

All of my other logins I remember by heart.

username Zoom

Abi

Written Sep. 2, 2007 / Report /

I have them memorized, but then some sites go and require capital letters and 4 numbers in specific places and that makes me start thinking about just getting a key chain password thingy with fingerprint protection. Does that exist?

Okay, so here's what I wrote about this.

Remember, I don't have adverts and couldn't care less about stats. And if you commented, it would only mean more work for me ;-) I'm just posting this link as a reply to this note.

Nils, you magnificent bastard.

That's a pretty cool way of picking a password that's unique across all services, but still being able to condense it to only one "password" you have to remember--the cipher.

But what happens if you forget the cipher?

In that case, my inquisitive friend, you revert to the scrap of paper you wrote them on anyways?

The names are fairly simple for me: there are three login names I use, unless email is specified, in which case there are three possible options, depending on the purpose of the site. There are 5 passwords I rotate between, all of them somehow thematically themed to the purpose of the site itself, and the level of protection required. For time sensitive password systems ("you must change your password after X number of days/logins") I have derivative passwords based on the password chosen.

Really, it's all fairly simple.

just about every year or so i go through and freek out and think someone might be onto my password cipher and so i think of a new one.

i have about 6 now, it's almost to the point where i need to write things down...

I use an app (that has a master-password) that stores all my 2091283908 login/other noteworthy info. Here's what I'm using, but there's others out there: http://keepassx.sourceforge.net/

I too just have three log-in combos :)

i only have 2 usernames i use, and 4 passwords, so not too much...

I have a few combinations, and have them memorized.

Isn't this what the keychain's for?

Hah, Nils, that's brilliant!

I keep mine all locked up in a text file. And by locked up I mean not locked up at all. Very sloppy of me and I've been meaning to take care of that for some time but never gotten around to it. (Edit: ah, felt inspired. Locked them up in the keychain).

Normal websites I just memorize since I use the same few usernames/passwords. For accounts with money involved I use more secure passwords with Password-Safe (or Password Gorilla when on my Mac since it supports Password-Safe's format).

Funny you should ask this, since I just went through hell and back because my gmail was hacked, and since you never have to throw anything away from gmail there was a ton of stuff in there about passwords for various sites. I've used the same two or three for years, but started to imagine this scenario when my gmail was hacked: what if someone gets the password for your email, then sees archived emails from financial sites in your email account, and you use the same password (or an easy to figure out variation of same) for those financial sites? It could even become identity theft in the hands of someone really resourceful. Scary!

I changed many of my passwords, and still have more to go, but now I have a hard time remembering the new ones. I just discovered OneNote 2007, and I'm addicted! I've started putting them all in there in a password protected page in a notebook, so as long as I don't forget the password to the passwords, I'm golden!

I basically just use one login for just about all of my sites, and have about 4-5 different variations of passwords. I hate having to remember a ton of them, so I stick to a few and change them around a little bit.

I came across Digital life management in April and found it very useful. You may not use the exact system Justin uses but I'm sure we could all work around the same concept :)

I try to push OpenID as much as possible. Otherwise have my own hashtable and hashfunctions to remember the usernames and passwords :-) OpenID would be so much more convenient.

Crayon and paper.

I'm old school. yo.

I have a different one for everything, but use Roboform to keep track of them. Its portable too and secure, so I can take them with me where ever I go.

My password is "password" usually.

Please Login To Leave A Comment

LooseSuits Sponsors Get in touch if you want in.

Hot Notes (View all »)

 

LooseSuits is part of the Chawlk Network of sites.

9 Great Places To Visit, Hang Out, & Meet New People

What's new and interesting at other Chawlk Network sites: