Well, that's annoying...
Sep. 8th, 2012 10:58 pmSomeone in Mexico apparently tried to hack my gmail account, and was stopped from logging on - since it was a VERY arbitrary string of letters and numbers that isn't easily associated with me (the college's code for a technician's course I took 30+ years ago) they must have used some sort of password generator software to get that far.
Hopefully the new password won't fail quite so easily, it's twice as long and even more arbitrary. Just hope I can remember it.
Hopefully the new password won't fail quite so easily, it's twice as long and even more arbitrary. Just hope I can remember it.
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Date: 2012-09-09 12:26 pm (UTC)Find a poem or quote you know well ... maybe a bit of a Monty Python sketch ...
E.g. "what is your name? what is your quest? what is your favourite colour"
Take the first letters "WIYNWIYQWIYFC"
Now take your birthdate (or your parent's, or any other famous date)
let's take July 20th, 1969 ... 1969/07/20
now alternate them
W1I9Y6N9W0I7Y2Q0
A random looking set of letters and numbers, but very easy to recreate if you can't remember the code.
There are variations you can add in terms of grouping, capitalisation, adding punctuation marks ... but as long as you remember your phrase and your birthdate (or other important date) then you can recreate your password.
As a final thing, I usually take the name of the site (paypal, gmail, ebay, facebook, etc.) and have a little algorithm for taking some letters and converting them into something in the password ... that makes every site password unique (so getting my LinkedIn password won't get you into Paypal etc.) but again, easy to regenerate if I forget the password, I just use my little algorithm
A simple algorithm might be to take the 2nd, 4th and 6th characters of the URL (after the www. bit) and convert those letters to the numbers on a cellphone keyboard ... so Facebook would get "a e o" and then you can look at a phone keypad to see which digits those correspond to. Sort of like a checksum :-) (without looking, I think that becomes 236)
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