How the Gizmodo Crew Manages Their Passwords

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As you should already know by now, today is Change Your Password Day. Maybe you're overwhelmed. Maybe you need ideas. Well, what do the pros do? Your very own Gizmodo writers use the very best (and very worst) techniques.

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Matt Buchanan:
I have a handful of root passwords that I modify for websites, depending on security level. And email and financial both have distinct root passwords not used anywhere else. But for CHANGE YOUR PASSWORD DAY, I'm switching to a password manager with unique, complex passwords for everything, even my Pinterest account.

Brian Barrett:
I should probably be better about this, but I rotate three different passwords that are random alphanumerics. I don't change them as often as I should.

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Joe Brown:
Same password for everything: my social security number and my mom's maiden name.

Roberto Baldwin:
I've started using this method for my passwords: a string of random words instead of one word with random characters.

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Kyle Wagner:
I use the random word sequence as well, but for low-priority accounts, I'll still use variations of my password from 1998. For my laptop password, which I have to type over and over, I use a short and relatively insecure, easy-to-type password. For all other accounts, I give my login to Mat Honan and matt buchanan to take care of.

Sam Biddle:
I've pretty much been using the same password, with minor variations, since 2000.

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(Regarding password managers like 1password he says:)
I log in to devices that aren't my laptop pretty frequently...friends' computers, at my dad's place, reviewing phones, etc. I don't want to have to use a password scheme that requires Dropbox—I admire your discipline, but I think that'd drive me nuts.

Mat Honan:
I use a similar technique to Robbie. Oh, and I use 1password to keep it all straight (synced across multiple computers with Dropbox). It is nuts. It's totally nuts. And every time I get a new device, it's useless until I get 1pw and dropbox on there.

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My passwords for commonly used services (Google, Dropbox, Amazon, Twitter, etc) are memorable, if tough to guess. But how often are you on someone else's machine? Is that a frequent problem?

Also, if you've never looked at the "easy gawker passwords" file from the hack last year, it's worth eyeing. So many are dictionary words.

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Kristen Philipkoski
I use 1password. I sync it to my phone with dropbox which helps me log in from multiple computers, but it can be a pain.

Jesus Diaz:
I use 1password. All my passwords are a) 32 characters or more using passphrases and changed characters ($, 3, 1) plus numbers or b) completely random generated at maximum size.

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My iPad and computers all have long passwords (16 characters minimum) composed of random numbers and modified words. iPhone has a shorter one.

Brent Rose (Me):
I came up with a simple formula that I plug a site's name into, so I can always remember the password (or figure it out within a few seconds) but I have a different password for every site. Planning on adding a level or two of complexity later this year. It's dorky, but it's been working really well for me, and I don't trust password managers. Single point of failure for all of my passwords = no bueno.

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Andrew Tarantola:
The only password manager I trust is the one on my encrypted biometric USB dongle. I then handcuff said dongle to my wrist for an extra layer of protection.

Andrew Liszewski:
I'm heavy on mnemonics like the system Robbie posted. But it was after a college psychology professor told us a simple one to remember his office number, which has still stuck with me to this day. I'll also roll the important ones before and after something like CES, when I know I'll be on and off different wireless networks throughout the week.

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Jamie Condliffe:
I have a way of creating a mnemonic for every site I use, and then a method for swapping some letters out to become numbers. I change the way I create the mnemonic and the way the letters are swapped out from time to time. Now I've written that down, I cant believe how nerdy it sounds.

And the winner, for geekiest answer of all...

Chris Beidelman:
Right now I use an algorithm similar to Brent, although I am in the process of writing my own encrypted password manager.

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What do you do? And more importantly, what will you do after you change your password today?

Image credit: Shutterstock/Rynio Productions