Yeah, it's easy enough if you only have a few passwords to remember. But, in today's world, with multiple email accounts, workplace network security, online banking, e-commerce sites, media sites requiring login, BBSs, etc. it's easy to have dozens of passwords to remember. Sure, you can have a few passwords that you use many places, but then you have to remember which ones you used for each thing. Digital security becomes quite a nuisance.
Biometrics actually aren't so good, really. If you need a family member or someone else you trust to access an account for you for some reason, are you supposed to give them your thumb? If your thumbprint becomes "compromised" nothing you used it for will ever be secured again. And if you should lose your thumb in an accident, you've lost access to anything secured by it.
The latter two points apply for non-home users... in fact, I'd say they're even more relevant.
actually the passwords are remembered for as long as the admistrator set themWe have to change our password every 45 days (though the prompt starts appearing at 30 days). We have to use 8+ characters, one upper-case, one number. No symbol (though I do). Can't use the same password twice in one year. (Yes, it remembers for a length of time, not a number of passwords.) Because we use certain software, the password can't be more than 10 characters long, as the software can't handle it and uses our Windows IDs to log us in.
I work for the Civil Service, in case you hadn't guessed.![]()
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