donutsweeper: (capt salute)
donutsweeper ([personal profile] donutsweeper) wrote2014-01-30 11:05 pm

Passwords

A recent conversation I had with something bemoaning having to remember passwords and the problem of mistyping or not remembering them too many times reminded me of an idea I came up with when I had to remember constantly changing ones.

Back when I was working, passwords were the bane of my existence. There were three different ones required and they had to be changed every month. (This was above and beyond the main database one with the clever username AND password of "admin"). Anyway, work had assigned me a username, but keeping track of the passwords (all needed to be at least 12 digits long, contain capitalizations, numbers AND symbols) was driving me insane until I figured out something I could do to remember them other than writing them down (something not really possible, since I shared a desk and workstation with my boss).

I picked a tv show for each. To boot up the system I used Torchwood, so the first month was "EverythingChanges(S1E1)" then "DayOne(S1E2)" then "GhostMachine(S1E3)" etc. My email was NCIS so "YankeeWhite(E1S2)" etc etc and the membership files was Doctor Who. If an episode title wasn't long enough I repeated it, so DW's first episode became "Rose(S1E1)Rose(S1E1)". Episode titles are easily googleable so all you have to do is remember where you were in the list to remember what it is.

With luck you won't have to change them as often as I did, but if you ever need a trick for coming up with one and being able to remember it, hopefully this idea will help. :)
methylviolet10b: (Need Coffee)

[personal profile] methylviolet10b 2014-01-31 06:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I like your system! I've found that if the system accepts characters such as spaces and punctuation, it's really easy to come up with a memorable, strong password. There's still the need to substitute a letter or word for a numerical character, but that's not too hard. Chances are excellent that anyone on the internet these days can type a sentence with relative ease, and a favorite quote from a book, or a line from a nursery rhyme, or a memorable song lyric all work really well. Plus the possibilities are nearly infinite... ;-)
Edited 2014-01-31 18:27 (UTC)