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24 points

A friend has a notebook next to her computer with all her passwords in it. Initially I was horrified - what if you’re burgled? - but actually it’s genius. Much more secure than letting a browser remember them, and she doesn’t even need to memorise a Bitwarden password.

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33 points

In a household it’s probably not that bad. There aren’t many people breaking into homes looking for account details.

I’ve had my identity stolen several times, and every single time it was stolen from a Fortune 500 company.

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17 points

I just make all of my passwords password123 then I don’t have to worry about memorizing them

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5 points

*********** that’s what I see

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3 points

Really? hunter2

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1 point

Maybe they’re using one of those instances that censors things, lol

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3 points

Ah, my girlfriend’s approach. No matter how much I show her a pwned password or set her up on my Vaultwarden, she’s not interested

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3 points

Yeah, these newfangled password requirements ruined my life. I refuse to sign up for any website that doesn’t let me use hunter2.

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13 points

Just add the same memorized bit to the end. Something simple like “123” would work. Even if the book is stolen it won’t do them any good.

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10 points

Kind of like salting.

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12 points

This concept is also known as Double Blind Passwords or Horcruxing.

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4 points

That’s an excellent idea! I’ll mention it to her.

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8 points

It’s a primitive password manager, primitive because unencrypted and not integrated into your devices, but far better than not having a password manager.

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-4 points

Assuming the laptop is running bitlocker (often on by default), has a user password, and is offline, that’s pretty decent.

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15 points

Notebook refers to a paper notebook. Not a laptop.

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8 points

My mom told me that she was made fun of for having a book of hand written account credentials related to running her business (6 people total). I told her it was the best way to do it that wasn’t massively overcomplicated for her situation and to keep it up. The only recommendation I made is that she use different long passwords for every site since she’s already not memorizing them.

Personally I’m not convinced this isn’t the best way unless you’re being targeted by physical bad actors

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4 points

Where is this book? In the office? I’d say that’s absolutely horrible. If it’s at home I think that’s more okay.

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Or maybe behind a keyed lock in the office? Not a keypad, a physical key.

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5 points

What if the notebook gets destroyed or lost, though? That’s my biggest concern here

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