Ouch! Can a Host please edit the thread title to correct the typo? It should read "online", not "inline".
Online security
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Originally posted by Bryn View Posthttps://www.reviewgeek.com/113090/th...tect-yourself/
Ouch! Can a Host please edit the thread title to correct the typo? It should read "online", not "inline".
Best take your scourge in both hands, that being the case!
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I expect people have seen this before, but it is a useful reminder about choosing simple passwords.
"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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I'm glad to say my current convention for passwords puts me in the 37 billion years category. I use only alphabetical and numeric characters and use a combination which have meaning or interest for me - the dates I would like to remember in any case. But I don't use all of the characters in the word - say it could be the last 5 characters, and the date is broken up in the same 2 places in the password format. As the layout is "standard" I can, for key services have (in my phone) a clue - the clue also being 3 words (1 for each word, 1 for the date, 3 in all). The clue is "by association" and reasonably obscure.
If one of my words in the password, in its complete form, is "Lincoln" my clue would be Abe (for Abraham L. because I know I am thinking of the Lincoln memorial in Washington). So I can choose the number of characters from "Lincoln" by which I can recall the password. "Greenwich" could lead to the date of the battle of Trafalgar, the association being the fascination I had as a young child with Nelson's scarred uniform from Trafalgar, in the Maritime museum. As I use about 20 - 25 words/dates chosen in random combination, I find this manageable.
I am aware of password managers - rather deposits all the keys to my accounts in one place, busting password managers IT system must be an attractive target for hackers, surely? For less used accounts my passwords are in a spreadsheet but only the 3 "clues". The clues and corresponding passwords themselves are in an anonymous notebook on my desk. (When I can't recall what the clue refers to, I'll know I'm in deep trouble, memory wise - I already have a little difficulty in quickly recalling some names.........).
I subscribe to Computeractive which has helped me over the years setting up and sorting out computers and devices, and their problems. There has been a lot of discussion in recent issues on how to form a strong password - including acronyms (which for some reason didn't appeal to me).
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostI'm glad to say my current convention for passwords puts me in the 37 billion years category. I use only alphabetical and numeric characters and use a combination which have meaning or interest for me - the dates I would like to remember in any case. But I don't use all of the characters in the word - say it could be the last 5 characters, and the date is broken up in the same 2 places in the password format. As the layout is "standard" I can, for key services have (in my phone) a clue - the clue also being 3 words (1 for each word, 1 for the date, 3 in all). The clue is "by association" and reasonably obscure.
If one of my words in the password, in its complete form, is "Lincoln" my clue would be Abe (for Abraham L. because I know I am thinking of the Lincoln memorial in Washington). So I can choose the number of characters from "Lincoln" by which I can recall the password. "Greenwich" could lead to the date of the battle of Trafalgar, the association being the fascination I had as a young child with Nelson's scarred uniform from Trafalgar, in the Maritime museum. As I use about 20 - 25 words/dates chosen in random combination, I find this manageable.
I am aware of password managers - rather deposits all the keys to my accounts in one place, busting password managers IT system must be an attractive target for hackers, surely? For less used accounts my passwords are in a spreadsheet but only the 3 "clues". The clues and corresponding passwords themselves are in an anonymous notebook on my desk. (When I can't recall what the clue refers to, I'll know I'm in deep trouble, memory wise - I already have a little difficulty in quickly recalling some names.........).
I subscribe to Computeractive which has helped me over the years setting up and sorting out computers and devices, and their problems. There has been a lot of discussion in recent issues on how to form a strong password - including acronyms (which for some reason didn't appeal to me).
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI think you've just given us all clues as to how to bust your password in a lot less than 37 bn years.
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....Amazon has completely just gone rogue on me....a few months ago Amazon just abbreviated what was neccessary to activate a 'sale'....I liked the long way, with myself having to put in all info [I felt this was the securest way]....then Amazon abbrev' down to one or two clicks without my initiating it....now when i buy from Amazon my email address/password/and mobile phone are all displayed back to me for me to see....on Sunday while registering for My5 the same info was displayed back to me in the same format....I find this very disconcerting....bong ching
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....Amazon has completely just gone rogue on me....a few months ago Amazon just abbreviated what was neccessary to activate a 'sale'....I liked the long way, with myself having to put in all info [I felt this was the securest way]....then Amazon abbrev' down to one or two clicks without my initiating it....now when i buy from Amazon my email address/password/and mobile phone are all displayed back to me for me to see....on Sunday while registering for My5 the same info was displayed back to me in the same format....I find this very disconcerting....
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostIt should be possible to turn off autofill either through Amazon account settings or browser settings?
....it is the My5TV connection that worries me most....Last edited by eighthobstruction; 20-09-22, 15:19.bong ching
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....You put a ? at the end
....it is the My5TV reconnection that worries me most....
Also, I didn't know if you'd already gone down that route and not succeeded.
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....I'm at sea about it all....the only route I have tried is via Amazon Chatbot....no help....Amazon phone call....unable to communicate (lack of Eng-Hindi)....another chatbot better but they wanted screenshots etc (I no can do)....So at the Mo' I'm saying the Consumers Prayer....<<Don't let this take too long/don't let them lock me out of my account/don't let them give me a scheme I can't comprehend.etc Amen.... Thanks oddoneout (make as if I never even mentioned it....)
....on #10 I edited reconnection to connectionbong ching
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There could be more than one explanation for the My5 anomaly. As suggested some autofill setting might have been set up in the browser, though surely that shouldn't be generic, but rather site specific. OTOH it really could be some "helpful" tech organisation meddling with individual data. Just to make this perhaps a little clearer, many of the "other" big tech companies use AWS for storage - AWS meaning Amazon Web Services, so data leaks or other unwarranted activities are certainly slightly plausible.
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....I'm at sea about it all....the only route I have tried is via Amazon Chatbot....no help....Amazon phone call....unable to communicate (lack of Eng-Hindi)....another chatbot better but they wanted screenshots etc (I no can do)....So at the Mo' I'm saying the Consumers Prayer....<<Don't let this take too long/don't let them lock me out of my account/don't let them give me a scheme I can't comprehend.etc Amen.... Thanks oddoneout (make as if I never even mentioned it....)
....on #10 I edited reconnection to connection
Screenshots are actually not difficult. In Mac, command+shift+4 will bring up a cropping tool which will allow you to drag a rectangle around the area you want to capture. The resulting screenshot will then land on your desktop, when you can send it off as an e-mail attachment to wherever. In Windows the command Windows key+shift+S will bring up a snipping tool similar to the Mac cropping tool, and then allow you to save the snip or screenshot anywhere you want.
In my experience, the best course of action is to fob off the chatbot with non-committal and evasive answers until it tires and hands you over to a real live customer service advisor, who will most likely delay and obfuscate in the same manner as the chatbot until they also succumb to ennui, and then decide to engage with your problem. You have to be persistent, I'm afraid.
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