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Post-It notes

Post-It notes

Posted Nov 30, 2006 13:11 UTC (Thu) by Richard_J_Neill (subscriber, #23093)
In reply to: The Firefox password manager vulnerability by kirkengaard
Parent article: The Firefox password manager vulnerability

Often, post-it notes are quite sensible for storing passwords. It all depends on who has physical access, and for domestic users, writing the password down is no bad thing, especially if it helps them remember it. Of course it depends on what the password is for, but in most cases, if someone can break into your house, you have bigger problems than losing your passwords!

The real danger is when a user uses the same password in multiple different places. Then, say their slashdot login might also work for their bank.


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Post-It notes

Posted Nov 30, 2006 17:53 UTC (Thu) by emkey (guest, #144) [Link]

Post its are never a good idea. Why have passwords if they are? Passwords exists to limit access and provide auditing. Making it easy for somebody in your group or company to use your identity is not a good thing.

The main reason I don't store passwords beyond the obvious security issues is that I WILL forget a password if I don't have to type it in regularly.

Post-It notes

Posted Dec 3, 2006 15:55 UTC (Sun) by k8to (subscriber, #15413) [Link]

As the post you are responding to pointed out, post-it notes are useful because access to them is restricted to a physical domain, which can be quite small. A post it note on my computer here, for example, will be viewable by myself and a few close friends who visit my apartment. The risk is _quite_ small, and it would be fine for most applications.

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