SO MANY PASSWORDS, SO LITTLE MEMORY
How many keys are on your keychain? I just looked at mine and
counted nine keys. And that's not counting the bulky little remote
control key fob that locks and unlocks my car. I've tried to
consolidate my keys by making one key fit every lock in the house
instead of having different keys for the front door, the back
entrance, the shed and some of the different rooms that lock. Then I
thought about making just one key that would work for everything.
One key to lock the house, unlock the car, open the Post Office box,
access the storage unit I rent, get into my bank's storage box, open
the office door, you get the idea. And while that idea would
certainly reduce the number of keys I have to lug around with me
every day, having just one key for everything would actually be a
bad idea, especially when it comes to the issue of security.
Think about it for a moment. What would happen if I lost my one key
or even worse, somebody stole it? If I just had nine or ten
different locks, it wouldn't be too bad. I'd just have to change all
the locks or at the very least have all of them re-keyed. But what
if I had a hundred locks or more? That could be a real problem. Yet
when it comes to passwords, this is exactly what a lot of us do.
Because we have so many passwords guarding all those websites we
access and programs we use, it's become a real problem trying to
create and then remember so many different passwords for all of
them. Yet this is what is being demanded from us when we go
someplace online for the first time and that place is designed to
store something relevant to us so we can revisit it repeatedly. You
need a password to secure it. And that's not even counting all of
your applications that require a level of security such as your
checkbook program.
Believe it or not, there's a lot of people out there using just one
password for everything and they do it because basically they just
can't remember a unique password for all the places they go and
products they use. Yet having one password for everything is like
having one key. It's a bad idea. Losing or forgetting a password is
far more easy to do than losing a physical key. It's a lot more
common than you may think. People are forgetting passwords every
day. Just take a look at most websites that ask for your password.
Most all of them have a question that asks if you've forgotten it!
Typically they will either email it to the address you registered
when you first applied for the password or they will let you pick a
new one once your identity has been verified. Still it can be a big
mess. Fortunately, there are utilities out there that are designed
to manage all of your passwords so you won't have to remember any of
them.
If you have Windows PC, check out Password Manager ($29.95) from
Large Software. If you have a Macintosh, check out 1Password
($39.95) from Agile Solutions. Password Manager and 1Password will
remember all of your usernames (you can forget those too) and
passwords for every website you visit and the applications you use.
Both utilities will work with most any of the popular browsers like
Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari and Opera. They will even import
all of your existing passwords stored in the browser and deactivate
the browser's password feature. All of your password information is
heavily encrypted by these utilities yet no bridges are burned. If
you later decide not to use them, the password file used by your
browser will be restored.
Another nice feature offered by these utilities includes being
protected from phishing scams that pretend to be legitimate websites
so that they might trick you into entering your passwords. Password
Manager and 1Password both have smart form fillers that can
recognize phishing sites and will not release your password
information to them.
When you are away from your computer, both utilities offer a memory
stick ability that lets you take all of your passwords with you.
When using another computer, simply insert the memory stick into any
available USB port and that computer's browser will know to fill in
your usernames and passwords whenever you access a website to which
you have an account.
Removing the memory stick takes all of your password information
along with it and nothing remains on the borrowed computer.
Passwords are the virtual keys of our time and they need the same,
if not even greater protection than your physical keys. Never write
your passwords down nor store them in a word processing document
where they may be easily discovered. And don't use obvious passwords
like your name or birthday. Passwords really should not be words at
all. They should be a cryptic combination of letters, numbers and if
allowed, punctuation marks. Given the complexity and the large
number of passwords we require these days, a password manager really
is the best possible solution to a cryptic problem.
Password Manager:
www.largesoftware.com
1Password:
www.agilewebsolutions.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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