Post-it's seem to be the most popular...

Bottoms of keyboards; front, sides, bottom, back of monitors; taped to desk 
undersides; in a desk drawer, on the bottom of desk speakers, telephones, 
lamps, etc.; I've even seen them taped to the bottoms of mice.  If I have to 
write something down, it goes in my wallet.  Not that that's a good idea, but 
when somebody says "you'll need this password a few times a day, and it 
changes once a month: r4fis9gf',.pf*$FD/1@$^490int8-^&7fircds34167", it 
becomes impossible to remember.  Where I can think up reasonably complex 
passwords that I will remember easily.

1lvJ3s$|c@ - I would just remember the phrase "I love Jessica".
or
j0y2+H3wor|d - Joy to the World.

These may seem rather lame, but consider that they are alphanumeric, plus 
symbols, longer than the average password, and I don't have to write them 
down.  The most common passwords I've encountered has been the name of a 
significant other or pet, in plaintext.  Phone numbers or street address 
numbers are also common.  Of course, I don't see a great many passwords, 
certainly not the ones that people don't write down in an obvious place, so 
your mileage may vary.

- Casey

On Friday 14 December 2001 06:06 pm, Zeshan Ghory wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 13, 2001 at 02:29:44PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > Is anyone familiar with a government or private study that surveyed the
> > top 10 places to store passwords that were written down on paper; e.g.
> > under the keyboard, etc?
>
> I would imagine that it would be very difficult to obtain enough
> information to carry out such a survey effectively.
>
> Personally, I have certainly seen passwords (with corresponding
> user names) written on post-it notes stuck to monitors, on
> whiteboards, and sometimes just scribbled down on random bits of paper
> lying on a desk.
>
> This is much more likely to occur if people are *given* passwords
> instead of choosing their own.
>
>
> Zeshan

-- 
Casey Allen Shobe
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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