Of course I’m not asking you to give away your passwords. But for those of you who have so many, how do you keep track of them all? Do you use any unique methods?
I know many people struggle between having something that’s easy to remember and something that’s easy to guess. If you keep a note with your passwords on it, for example, it can be stolen, lost, or destroyed, or if you make them according to a pattern that’s easy to remember, the wrong people might find them easier to guess.
In the couple places where I don’t use a password manager, I make up a silly sentence and use the first letter of each word and then mix in numbers and symbols. I guess that means the letters I use end up not being evenly distributed, but I think it’ll be alright.
Bitwarden
Nice try
I’ll do as long a sentence as I can easily remember. Something silly, a memorable movie quote, an explanation of what the profile/app is for, a reminder for why I use the profile/app, goal I have in the area of life I need to use the app for.
Since most password fields require special characters, I’ll slap an exclamation point or question mark at the end to complete the sentence. Sometimes I’ll think to use a sentence that already has a number and type the digit instead of spelling it out. Or I’ll just use a 2 for too or to.
Not-real example based on a not-real goal
idriveaHummer2workinthefuture!
Let’s just say the book known as A Pickle for the Knowing Ones is surprisingly useful as a book cipher book if the book cipher is designated to construct passwords.
They’re all the same-ish.
Let’s say my password is Token, but spelled like t0k3||
I would attach something related to the site on it, so if the site is lemmy for example, the password would be like
t0k3||Addictedtosurfing
If the site is Amazon something like
t0k3||Thanksformyfavoritejob
I called it “lock and key” style and I’d change the beginning part, the “lock”, once a year.
So next year it’ll be ef|=027Addictedtosurfing
These are examples lol
I guess you can sha256 hash them for extra security too
Pretty much this. But I used a function of the host name, so it would be easier to remember.
It gets annoying when the site forces you to rotate the password. After that happened a couple of times I started using a password manager.
Password manager. For things that I forsee I will end up needing to type often, I might choose a passphrase made of actual words. Some password managers can do this, or create passwords made of syllables you can pronounce. It’s way easier to type correctly.
When I’m without a manager, I just look around for random objects, especially things with numbers and special characters.
hunter3
for everything.You use 7 stars for your password?
2 ways
1 password manager
- I use them very often. I have a bunch of different yes complex passwords that I’m using repeatedly throughout the day so brute force rote memory….
But yeah. Password manager
Bitwarden and be done.
I don’t. Bitwarden and that’s it.
I remember them two characters at a time.
Theres a couple of passwords I remember, like for logging on my PC and into my password manager
I used to have a couple of letters from the site/service followed by an obscure dialectal word that’s not found in dictionaries with a few characters replaced by numbers and symbols. Those two letters kind of work like salting to keep every hash of my password unique.
Now I just do bitwarden.
KeePassXC/DX.