I let everything sort of "Be" -- let it be, let it be, let it be. My premise is "There is no privacy anymore." All the privacy notes coming from banks, credit card companies and and and --tell exactly that, indeed confirm it. They want to assure you of something that is no more, gone with the wind of technology, born up into the Apple cloud or down into the microsoft cave. Marta
On Feb 18, 2009, at 12:57 PM, Lee Larson wrote: > > On Feb 18, at 12:35 PM, john humphries wrote: > >> Is there not some way to change the password links and invalidate the >> present keychain? > > If you change your login password, then your keychain is protected > by that new password. (The paranoid can actually change their > keychain password to be different from their login password using > Keychain Access. I had my system set this way for a while, but > found it to be a nuisance.) > > Nobody without your current password can read your keychain because > it's strongly encrypted. > > > _______________________________________________ > The next Louisville Computer Society meeting will > be February 24 at MacAuthority, 128 Breckinridge Lane. > Posting address: [email protected] > Information: http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup _______________________________________________ The next Louisville Computer Society meeting will be February 24 at MacAuthority, 128 Breckinridge Lane. Posting address: [email protected] Information: http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup
