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No matter how good your security is, you'll still have users...

Comments
  • 3
    I would like to read a few pages:p
  • 15
    In a digital world where everyone expects you to store your sensitive information into a computer, writing them in a notebook can be quite a twist...
  • 0
    *facepalm*
  • 1
    Is there a little lock on the side of the book for which you need the key to open this book? If not then their security is not good.
  • 5
    Great if you're a doctor
  • 6
    Having flashbacks to the scene in silicon valley when they steal the password off the sticky note
  • 1
    @JukeboxRhino I was thinking the same thing lol
  • 1
    Great if you have registered into lots of accounts and you are suffering from "password amnesia"! But surely you shouldn't write them down in a 'log book' which clearly tells anyone who happens to read it all the passwords to your accounts.
    //exceptions if you suffer from the above 'amnesia' :-p
  • 2
    Plot twist: it comes with its own secret decoder ring.
  • 2
    It requires physical access so...
  • 1
    @NazgUruk now to build yourself an avatar! Welcome to devRant :)
  • 0
    Yes and thank you @starless :-)
  • 0
    @starless be sure to drink your ovaltine
  • 0
    I feel like physical storage can increase safety.

    It's good practice to use long, unique password phrases. You can't remember all of them, so you store them in a manager, which has an encrypted vault using a strong master pass.

    But what if you forget that password? Storing it physically on a post-it is stupid, but under a creaky floorboard in a lockbox...
  • 0
    I was being sarcastic @Jop- :-v
  • 0
    *Having fun with generating a 50-letter long password and writing it down in a book*
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