Someone stole my password on here a while ago and keeps logging in every once in a while to make jokes that I don't even get.
You think that's bad? I'm a frickin' sock puppet!
Heh heh heh. I've got you all fooled. My password is YEKNOM!
Hey, that's really cool. So is mine, now.
mine is KEYMON bwah hah hah hah!!!
123456
Huh. That's the combination to my luggage.
#6?
I am not a number, I am a free man!
"I am not a number, I am a free man!"
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.....
Hey, that's the combination to my pennyfarthing bike.
Up from #8 not quite a year ago. Or maybe it's just that those UKians care more about football.
Some reprobate keeps on logging and leaving turgid litanies in my name. Wish I knew his game.
*sighs*
Why is it, do you think, that people use words like "monkey" for passwords? What is the thought process? I don't get it, and I do it too.
Note: monkey is not my password.
Yes, but shouldn't it be?
Na, Trac's is Bashi, Queen of All She Surveys.
Just depends on what my password's for--easy ones for low security stuff--and anybody that wants my email can have it--and plenty tougher for my bank, etc.
My rational is to lead a pure life, that way Bush The Man won't bother to investigate me.
*looks around furtively
letmein? I don't ge...fuck, nevermind I got it.
When I first joined the internet with my 28.8 modem, my password for my Yahoo mail was "banana". And then, to be very witty, I made it "notbanana" so if #2 asked if I'd changed my password to something tougher, I could say, "Yup. It's not banana."
UK postcodes of places you Gran once lived are handy, as they're strings of numbers and letters, apparently random but you remember them.
Now to wait for some desperate ID thief to work out where me Gran lives.
*waits for Mr. Tricycle to go to bed so as to try notnotbanana*
*googles for Granny Coppe*
Forgive my ignorance and general dearth of youth/net hipness but what is the deal with blink182?
I'll be soaking my bunions while listening to my Kay Kaiser 78's while I await your response.
People know you're secure if you use an alphanumeric mix for your password. blink182 is a safe one.
As anyone who's lost their password knows, I'm fond of chemical formulae.
NaCl?
I make strong passwords in a very sad way.
1. Think of a software application you really like.
2. Abbreviate the name.
3. Choose a version which you think was better than previous, and less buggy than those succeeding.
4-6. Repeat 1-3 for another piece of software
7-12(super strong). Repeat 1-6.
You password is whatever abbreviation you choose for your most loved software plus the version numbers you associate with the best versions.
ie32wd71 for example.
Mmmm, sodium chloride. My favourite chloride.
Might I make so bold as to suggest the NaCl song as composed and performed by Kate and Anna McGarrigle? Sample here.
My passwords are boring but then so is my computer and life to those on the look.
BushThe Man won't bother to investigate me. *looks around furtively