❌ Keeping written records of your passwords is bad because someone might accidentally gain access to your passwords.

✅ Uploading biometric and national indentity data is good because this new VC-backed startup that no one knows anything about wants to harvest your very soul, and sell it to their 1138 advertising partners who have TOTALLY legitimate interests.

🍆🍑 🤡🤡🤡‼️‼️

#SocialMedia #Wsocial #IdentityTheft #Vampirism #AgeVerification #Accountability

@SimonRoyHughes We're drowning in stupidity. I trust more my desk drawer than a VC-funded startup.

@SimonRoyHughes
I keep written passwords in a book so that if I'm unexpectedly killed or die, someone responsible can access them.

Random people can only accidentality access that in the same sense as putting all my goods into van while I'm out,
Insurance dictates all windows closed and all outer doors deadlocked (can't be opened from inside) if no-one is in.
There may be other hazards for random "accidentally" people in the house.
I've uploaded some ID to my bank. No-one else is getting it.

@raymaccarthy The Book of Passwords is a good idea.

@SimonRoyHughes
Hint, some local shops still cater for the old days when people wrote stuff down.
So there are small hardbacks with cut-outs on the edge.
These get one place tab:
QP
UV
XYZ

Perhaps for Irish-Scottish market as Mc gets a separate section.

It's also handy for numbers of my phones by model and other people's phone numbers.

Wife's book has an extra feature. It's Random Access. Simply a notebook. It may be mostly by age.