I've done it again. I've joined another blog community. I'm sure that I must be insane. I now have access to three different blogs under my name: this one on Blogger, one on WordPress (because I couldn't decided between the two when I first started out) and now one on a different site. Oh, I also have JimShue.com because my stinking ego didn't want some other guy with the same name to claim the domain just in case I become famous. :)
Blogger is my primary one. I've been using this one for over a year now and feel comfortable with the format and the functionality of it. I'm please that I can customize the look of it to make it my own without having to pay a webmaster (why does that sound slightly S & M to me?) to create something unique for me. I can change colors and the background image in the Masthead to make my blog somewhat unique to me.
WordPress I use to email thoughts from work - that is when I have free time. It sat dormant for about a year before I posted for the first time to it. I think it was a rant about idiot early a.m. drivers. From the one post that there is, you can probably discern that the free time from work thing hasn't happened yet. In fact, we've been on mandatory overtime off and on for three months now which doesn't give me any time to waste company time by sending emails to my blog.
The third one I started today just so that I could have access to a blog that is being kept private. I can't go into details bout it. If I did I'd have to kill you. Ha! Seriously, it's a friend who's new to this and just doesn't want to go public, but wants some encouragement from a few friends. I can respect that. It's a bit scary to put your thoughts down, hit enter and wait to see if anyone is reading and if they are, how their comments are going to go. Will they be nice? Or will they be like the ranters on newspaper forums who can't find a nice thing to say about anything?
But having three blogs (and a website) got me to doing some weird math problem. Counting work, I have three email accounts. The first email account I had was for work. I quickly discovered that there were free email accounts to be had and procured one from Hotmail using my name. I found that after a while of using it to make online purchases and registering for numerous websites or product warranties that the level of spam hitting it was daunting at times. I then created a Yahoo! account for personal emails. Having the two really works well as I don't have to check the Hotmail account as often for legitimate email that may have been caught in the spam filter. Conversely, I rarely received spam on the Yahoo! account.
Now for the tricky part and what is contributing to the feelings of insanity... passwords. Every account that is created requires a password. Experts say that to protect your information that you should create a unique password for each separate account. Um, right. I'll admit that I've duplicated some passwords and that the accounts that I haven't are the ones that when I'm prompted for a password are the ones that for the life of me I can't remember. National City has locked me out of their Points program because I can't remember the password. In order to reset my password I have to enter the PIN that was assigned to me when I signed on for the Points program. Hell, I can't even remember that a PIN was assigned!
So what's the answer? (What was the question?) Is there an easy way of remembering passwords that are hard enough to thwart hackers? Is this something I'm too paranoid about? I'd really like suggestions from any of you that have the same problem. Short of not doing anything online anymore, I'm stumped.
3 comments:
Sock, this is terrible, but I created a spreadsheet. I know, I know. I shouldn't have. But for real! I couldn't keep track of all of them. I'll be checking the comments here frequently to see if someone actually does have an idea that works...
Although, knock on wood, so far so good with my method. I haven't had any trouble.
I've read of something very similar. It's been suggested that passwords can be stored in a document file (or spreadsheet) on a flash drive. Then you just copy and paste your password as needed. What happens if I lose my flash drive! Or worse, what if it's found by someone else?!?
Sock, I did what Molly did (in a Word doc, itself password protected), but without "naming names." I have three passwords I use: one PW for accounts where I don't really care about privacy (e.g., art forums), another mid-level (for email accounts), and another high-level, for everything where I'll be paying or buying: banking, PayPal, etc. (I know I shouldn't duplicate, but I do, or I'd have no hair left.) In that Word doc, each password noted is really a clue, e.g., "post-DC" — and I keep to the same format for inserting numbers/#!&? characters/initial caps randomly so I know the PW just from the clue. Also, I have an email account for commerce, one for work (and two others under clients' domains), one for politics/ activism, one for personal, one for trash sites that I know will get spammed. Yahoo has the best spam-handling.
I just ran across this site for randomly generated PWs that are strong and easily remembered, and love it so far:
http://www.bad-neighborhood.com/password-generator.htm
It's a conundrum. I'd never leave a document that stored my passwords un-password-protected. I've lost flash drives before, and the angina over proprietary info on it (found it later) was more than enough to fret about.
Also? I've never seen a site that didn't have PW recovery. Look for the "Lost Password?" link on the site's log in page. As long as you know the email address you signed up with, it's rare you can't recover the password.
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