sammie
i'll repost this part and make it a little more clear for you. read the **** parts that i have added to explain more.

i will teach you how you can join 20,000 different websites with 20,000 different passwords and login to all 20,000 sites without forgetting a single password. How? read on

choose 4 symbols any 4 and remeber them, start your password with 2 of them. like this

$%
***** Dictonary attacks will always start with a letter, but some letters are commonly replaced with a symbol see more like "a" for @ or "s" for $ so an attacker can add both to the script so it tries both "simple" and $imple, by adding 2 symbols to the begining you eliminate this risk is one of the symbols you choose is not one that is standard to replace letters*****

choose a name, not your own i'll use my dogs, Max, but wow its only 3 letters long and anyone can guess it? sure they gotta guess one of 810,000 formulae too remember.

this formulae uses 4 symbols $% at the start and #^ at the end
**** just for showing how it works****

so start with for Max

$%M
**** for using Max i chose to capitalise the M but if its a longer word you can capitalise the 3rd or 4th or last letter as long as you apply the same formulae to all your passwords, you'll never forget your password again****

then use the standard @ for the a

$%M@

drop the last letter and replace with the 3rd symbol of your formulae
**** Dropping the last letter is important, because what you are trying to do is make standard words in the dictionary, none exsistant. i know this wont work with the letter S as it would revert the name to the singular, we are not all perfect lol ****

$%M@#

and now add the last symbol of your formulae

$%M@#^ = 95% strong from using my dogs name Max and not a mile long

any generic name used needs to have the vowles change for symbols like a=@ e=3 i=1 o=0 u=^

so to login into 20,000 sites without having to remember the password use this.


but only the first 6 letters of the domain name. take boonex.com
**** i use 6 letters from the domain, but if the domain has only 4 letters then add 2 numbers after the 1st 2 symbols, this ensures you can still drop the last letter of the name. see below ****
boonex.com would be using this formulae

$%B00n3#^ 100% strong

expertzzz.com would be

$%Exp3r#^ 100% strong

*** you done have to capitalise the 1st letter, i did it here to demonstrate, you can capitalise the 3rd letter so boonex.com would be:

$%b0On3#^ 100% strong

expertzzz.com would be

$%exP3r#^ 100% strong

*** for sites with less than 6 letters in the name use numbers you can remember, like 1982 for my year of birth, (dont use that, its just an example) add the numbers after the first 2 symbols so we can still drop the last letter***

msn.com would be

$%198Ms#^

bebo.com would be

$%19B3b#^

! " £ $ % ^ & * ( ) _ + - = < . , : ; @ ' ~ # [ { ] } \ | ` =30 symbols choose any 4 to make 2 pair

as pointed out in a comment, if the webmaster does not hash your passwords and keeps them in his database in the clear, they only have the one for their own site so can not use it to get to your other accounts like hotmail because he also has your email address you supplied.
estensen
Great reading. From now on I will be using these symbols to have my password(s) 100% safe. A while back I actually had a email-skimmer recording my credit card numbers and code, name etc, only 10-15 min after having a complete check of virus and other shit on my computer, and they managed to empty my bank savings account for a large amount of dollars. It wasnt the end of the world, but all the same, money is money and I hate to lose any of them, especially my savings.. You should all read the 'article' see more above and follow it, better safe than sorry.. :)
 
 
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