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Do not change that password
#11
Doc wrote:

I'm not cheesed off.

The guy is a head-case and he's inviting fools to follow him. Do so at your peril.

Ah, you've invested lots of time in pointless password-changing, and don't like being made to feel your valuable time has been utterly wasted by pinhead computer expert advisors.

Good point!
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#12
posted in the wrong spot
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#13
guitarist wrote:
[quote=Doc]

I'm not cheesed off.

The guy is a head-case and he's inviting fools to follow him. Do so at your peril.

Ah, you've invested lots of time in pointless password-changing, and don't like being made to feel your valuable time has been utterly wasted by pinhead computer expert advisors.

Good point!
I apologize.

I keep forgetting you're a troll.
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#14
Haha...I knew it wouldn't take long to cheer you up.

Troll? This isn't a a teen chat room.

I apologize to any teens that might have read that.
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#15
Mine did. I complained to them that having to keep a sticky note attached to my display with my latest password wasn't all that secure. They have since changed their policy and i now use the same password for everything.

rgG wrote:
My bank makes me change my PW every so often, whether I want to or not.
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#16
Not familiar with the MS's employee's work in question but I've read similar laments from IT folk who know first hand, better than most, that many security policies are self-defeating, developed as they are seemingly in a vacuum that assumes the user has little else to concern themselves with, or that the policy won't add to the pile of other security measures already present. Anytime you stop by someone's desk and see the stickies taped to the monitor, under the keyboard etc. you know it's not working. The same with poor password choices.

It's not that people don't "want" to be insecure, but that they are willing to be so if productivity takes a hit. Security needs to be a balanced with a certain amount of convenience, or you'll wind up with that.
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#17
Theft rarely takes place at the user's side of the computer.

It is far more profitable to target information stored on a company's servers.

Changing passwords every week doesn't protect you against hackers gaining access to Monoprice, for example, and stealing their stored information (name/address/credit card number/CVV).

Frankly, companies shouldn't be storing your credit card info in the first place (the transaction is either authorized or declined immediately), UNLESS you agree as a convenience to you.
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#18
Over Christmas, my aunt explained that she had to shred the address labels that had arrived in the mail because her identity could be stolen if someone knew her name and address.
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#19
zabasearch.com
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