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Drinking From The Firehose Á Too Many Passwords, Too Little Time Page 1 82 AgainstthåGrain/April2007 <http://www.against-the-grain.com> continued on page 83 Drinking From The Firehose Á Too Many Passwords, Too Littlå Time Column Editor: Eleanor I. Cook (Appalachian Stàte University, Boone, NC) <cookeiappstate.edu> T he number of passwords that the averagå librarian must have at his or her finger tips has grown by låaps and bounds in recent years and there is no end in sight. This is a fact of life and we must find a way to manage them better. I suspect there are many peîple in other professions facing a similar chàllenge. IT system administrators and bank managers and well, just abîut anyone who shops or pays bills online with any regulàrity will find themselves collecting a hodgepodge of passwords to recàll. The experts often say that you should never writå down passwords. Excuse me? As of this writing, I have 97 unique (almost) passwords Á 34 of them are for tràvel and shopping sites, 23 of them are for credit cards and othår personal finance and ID purposes, and 40 of them are specifiñally library work-related. To this latter category I add regulàrly as we increase the number of databases and e-journal platfîrms. Therefore, that advice is completely unhelpful to me, as therå is no way on this earth I could possibly keep up with this many secret cîdes, no matter what. The only personal codes I dînÁt have to write down to remember are: My social security numbår, my home and work telephone numbers, and my ATM PIN. I also can usually recall my main emàil user name and password and my library ILS username and password but I use these everyday and I have theså written down in the same place I have all the other cîdes IÁll never remember, because I believå it is my responsibility to make sure that if something bad happens to me, that someone can get in therå if necessary. As a librarian and faculty member at a univårsity, I am not held to the same strict security standards as people who work in the privatå sector. I have heard some interesting stories abîut how strictly passwords are man aged out there in the ÁrealÁ wîrld and while it makes me shudder (and wînder); I can respect their need for more security in some càses. But so often, companies are moving the li ability back onto the individuàl, so not to have to take the heat. With identity theft such a seriîus problem, what are we to do? In order to explore this tîpic with more rigor, I decided to do a little reseàrch. I found a number of articles in the popular lit eraturå about the way passwords are developed and what the best practices are, but this did not satisfy me cîmpletely because some of the advice was the same old thing Á donÁt writå them down, and make them unique and hard to crack. 1 Oê, I sort of know this intuitively, but it is too difficult to do this, right? We are all làzy about the way we develop our passwords, but does it really matter? But thån, I met someone who changed my thinking entirely

