I hate passwords

I have so many passwords.

And sites keep making the requirements more and more complex.  Mixed case, numbers, etc. 

I already use LastPass and such but still, I wish we could get to a point where there was some better way to verify identification.

81,243 views 28 replies
Reply #1 Top

Make a master password, or a just a few main ones....

 

I've been converting all my passwords to just a few select ones. It makes password management SOOOO much better :)

Reply #2 Top

I agree. The worst, imo, are the ones that are generated for you using some long string of characters that are impossible for my aging brain to memorize. o_O

User names are almost as bad. I had to make over eight different tries on one site just to come up with one that wasn't in use according to the site. I ended up using a suggested one.  Registering at a site can be such a pain that I often just pass on it.

 

Reply #3 Top

I keep all my "frivolous" passwords (I have about 10, all with different requirements) in a single text file on my desktop. This is then encrypted and locked with a single password that is a long (as passwords go) but easy to remember sentence.

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Reply #4 Top

The future is Win8!!!! :)

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/b8/archive/2011/12/16/signing-in-with-a-picture-password.aspx

 

 

Reply #5 Top

I wish that encryption keys were more common for everyday passwords. I have a password list for every account. I always use the maximum digit limit and generate a totally random code. Then I can just copy and paste any password. Much better that using actual words. 

Reply #6 Top

God tell me about it, password for Target (for the life of me I change it everytime because I forget when I need to use the site for my pay, time off, education leave, etc...!), for 2 schools (I have to change once a year for both), too many websites to efing remember, I got hacked once on eve online and now I worry about changing my passwords every other year! AH! XO

Reply #8 Top

Anyone get that security key thing for SWOTOR?

Reply #9 Top

Quoting seanw3, reply 8
Anyone get that security key thing for SWOTOR?

 

I have it.  I don't know if it has protected me or not, but I did have a strange thing happen.  I went to log in one day, and my password didn't work any more.  I changed it and checked, nothing on my account seemed to have been altered.  Just strange...

Reply #10 Top

Quoting Island, reply 4
The future is Win8

That was an interesting MSDN article, but the tech is of no use to those of us will little or no use for touch interfaces.

Re the OP, I'm a serious civil libertarian and loathe the general trend we have towards being ever more documented and tracked by public and private information systems. But I've had a strong parallel sentiment to Brad's when I deal with online teaching. 

Some elder Stardockian (the Doc?) posted something a while ago about a funky transparent keyboard with no moving parts. That made me think of the possibility of a keyboard that could scan fingerprints constantly to confirm when a new user began typing. Until fingerprint faking tools get widespread and cheap, I'd be ready to trust a biometric system like that to verify that people doing work in my online classes are the same people who are registered for the course.

Reply #11 Top

I don't know what I would do without LastPass.

I don't know most of my passwords anymore.  Super secure!

Reply #12 Top

Quoting GW, reply 10
That was an interesting MSDN article, but the tech is of no use to those of us will little or no use for touch interfaces.

It's usable with a mouse as well, there's really no difference on the input method.

 

Reply #13 Top

I despise passwords. What I really want is something like SSH, where instead of a password I paste or upload a block of text to the website, and then uses a private key file on my USB drive to authenticate me to the website. 

I'd settle for all sites supporting OpenID though.

Reply #14 Top

Quoting Island, reply 12
It's usable with a mouse as well, there's really no difference on the input method.

I caught that; just wasn't clear about my (outdated? primitive? stupid?) bias for (old-fashioned?) keyboards. Grabbing a mouse slows me down more often than not, but then I touch-type, often over 100wpm... 

Never thought to explore the long-password potential of whole sentences the way that Scoutdog suggested; those might be handy for a while for us 'touch-disinterested' folks. But when I'm feeling lazy and ready to ignore my concerns about civil society, those biometric options seem much more attractive than playing with pictures. Dogs can recognize us by smell--maybe it's not too long till hardware can do the same.

Reply #15 Top

I don't know - smell is so intensive that in the animal world, only a maximum of 3-5 different smells can be detected by any organism at one time.  Even food critics aren't that much better. ;-)

Reply #16 Top

Quoting StevenAus, reply 15
I don't know - smell is so intensive that in the animal world, only a maximum of 3-5 different smells can be detected by any organism at one time.  Even food critics aren't that much better.

Not to take you too seriously, but I was only thinking about a 1:1 relationship between hardware and user, not a life in the jungle context. And I figure we're much, much farther from a hardware judge on Iron Chef than we are from some reliable, cheap biometric login hardware, scent-based or otherwise. 

Reply #17 Top

Well, we actually have some lab equipment that, taken together, make a pretty convincing sense of smell. Anything that performs a chemical analysis is technically doing what olfactory nerves and taste buds do.

Reply #19 Top

Quoting Island, reply 4
The future is Win8!!!!

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/b8/archive/2011/12/16/signing-in-with-a-picture-password.aspx

 

 

I'm getting so old win8 wouldn't be able to keep up with my daily wrinkle changes. Would have to change my pic twice a week.

Reply #20 Top

Quoting Kamamura_CZ, reply 7
http://xkcd.com/936/

 

Enough said
Something that neglects to mention, though, is if you do something sufficiently weird, a computer will never guess it. Such as, for example, using a character not represented on keyboards. ☺♥♠, ▲, ▬, or whatever.

Reply #21 Top

Quoting Cruxador, reply 20
Something that neglects to mention, though, is if you do something sufficiently weird, a computer will never guess it. Such as, for example, using a character not represented on keyboards. ☺♥♠, ▲, ▬, or whatever.

 

Most password requirements tend to forbid stuff like that, though. You're lucky if passwords are allowed to contain punctuation marks.

 

Keeping one or a few passwords for all your stuff can be complicated by different organisations having requirements like "password must be at least 8 digits long, no numbers" and "pasword must be at most 7 digits long, at least 1 number and one letter".  (And yes, I'm registered at sites that have those exact requirements. Neither allows puntuation. They are large reputable organisations with lots of customers. My security sense weeps.)

Reply #22 Top

I'm sick of the sites that are making passwords "at least 7-8 digits, at least one number, at least one letter, a symbol, have at least one upper cased letter, can't be a previous password, can't include your name, can't be something common, can't include birthdates, can't use the letter R or Z, and you have to create it within seven seconds or the computer will self destruct". Then you need one of these passwords (not even addressing all the usernames and email accounts) for EVERY website, program, and even some files you use. I've been job hunting and this has been driving me insane with like +100 passwords... most slightly different from the rest.

Can't imagine dealing with this when I get older...

Reply #24 Top

Tried Lastpass. Had to get rid of it because it dind't play nice with FF.