Always two there are. No more, no less. The one they know, and the one they don’t.
I’m glad I’ve been using a password manager for several years now.
Yeah I think I’ve got 600 distinct logins in my bitwarden at this point, lol.
I wonder how much of this stems from two stupid IT policies. For decades users have been told to not write down passwords and to change them regularly. The result of this policy is to use a small number of password variations that one reuses. Then IT complaims about it.
The better plan has always been to use long random passwords that you never reuse and write them down by some method like a password manger and only change them rarely for example when they may be compromised,
My workplace has finally gone to passphrases and 1 year password life, which is nice as it’s a password I often need to type, so I’d rather 20 easy to type and memorise chars than 16 random
I remember asking my company if they have official password management software in my job before my last job. They did not. I can’t believe we have all this specific software to be used at the company but they don’t put some time to identify what they want employees to use for this. Funny thing is security teams are such big deals but I think they actually don’t want to get involved in case it does not work out.
Lot of security is theater. IT doing a CYA thing.
Which half? The hunt half or the er2?
What parts? I only see “The **** or the ***?”
The “correcthorse” part
yeah because half of them are 1234
I would do the word jumble suggested by xkcd, but so many websites require numbers, special characters, and disallow spaces that it would be impossible to remember unique passwords between those sites. Ironically I end up in a much weaker password ecosystem because I re-use the nearly-same password over and over again so I’m not constantly requesting a reset.
Why not use a password manager?
I’m split between a work pc, mobile, and home pc… It could work for 90% of cases. I never trusted a password manager though.
KeePass doesn’t rely on any third party, and if you choose to use a third party file storage to hold your password vault, it’s encrypted
BitWarden now supports passkeys and has a free 2FA app.
No excuses not to be as secure as possible anymore.
Single point of failure and a separate entity has all of your passwords and you have to continue paying them or lose access to everything. Sounds like a terrible idea to me
There are password managers you can self host. Bitwarden being one of them. Secure it as much as you want and keep off-site encrypted backups if you’re worried about a single point of failure.