You may have a good memory and successfully remembered your passwords so far, but as you add more and more providers there is a risk to get them mixed up or forget them at some point.
However, using more and more online services means using more and more passwords, and according to the same study regular users don’t usually use a password manager. Forgetting or losing passwordsĪccording to a recent study (1) online security experts consider a best practice to have different passwords for each service provider. Let’s talk about each one in more detail 1.
What are the risks of losing access to your accounts? Today, permanently losing a password to one of our service providers could have the same effect, so this means our passwords have become really important. more and more people are using cloud storage for their filesĪ few years ago a hard-drive failure resulting in the loss of our data was a real personal tragedy.our appointments and calendars are synced with the email provider.our phone contacts are synced with Google or iCloud.
our events are checked in on Facebook (and friends tagged, of course).our playlists are on last.fm, iTunes or Spotify.Since the dawn of the computer age we’ve been using computers as extensions of ourselves, saving our memories to photo archives and journals, our preferences to playlists and documents and our decisions to calendars and to-do lists.īut this digital evolution didn’t stop there – as we are now diving head first into the cloud era we put our trust more and more into service providers with our precious bits of information: