Nice try hackerman.
2024-01-22T12:29:54
CHANGED passw0rd123! TO passw0rd1234!
Oh cool, Lemmy automatically obfuscates your password. All I see is *************!
hunter2
Just changed it to hunter3, thought it was time I should upgrade security
But I’m only seeing *******. I guess that’s because it’s your password not mine.
(rip bash.org)
Six months ago, as the wrong password message happily reminds me regularly.
Nice try
In 2003, Bill Burr wrote “NIST Special Publication 800-63. Appendix A” – a security document that recommended passwords be changed every 90 days, and have irregular caps and special characters. When asked about it, and the resultant trends in people adding !@#$%^&*() to the end of their passwords, Burr said something enlightening:
Lmao
so yeah I hit the Bitwarden generate button and forget
2013-06-13T17:34
Alright, I have no idea. It’s probably been around ten years since I’ve deleted it.
Last week. In an effort to de-google as much of my PC as I could the only chromium based browser I have is edge. I used librewolf for general browsing (unlock) and Firefox for porn (unlock and no script). Librewolf has known issues working with YouTube which will cause even the highest speed internet to have YouTube be choppy AF. So I used edge for YouTube. But there is a known big in edge that logs you out of everything when you close the browser. And after a dozen times of 2FA logging in I just said fuck it and changed my Gmail password…and can’t close edge of I want to continue to watch certain channels
deleted by creator
Years ago. Google changes the ways to sign in more frequently. 2FA messages, authenticator, then confirming sign-in on a separate device, which now seems to have been standardized as passkeys.
You are supposed to do that?
Side note I try to do that about once a year.
If you’re memorizing your password, don’t change it too often because it’ll just confuse you and encourage you to pick easy to remember passwords which are less secure. Change your password if you hear about a hack, or have reason to suspect your password got leaked. Otherwise there’s no need.
If you have a password manager though, go off. Change it as often as you’d like.
(Also 2FA, unique passwords per site, etc etc etc)
I try to change it every other year or so. Then I forget it because I did not type it in and have to reset it to the old one.
After 5 times of this I’ve just given up and won’t change it until my password is in a common password dictionary