I canât imagine why anyone would answer these, but then again, most people who do probably also use âpassword123â as a password.
nostr:note1nsdtatjvt8nxdl7h9a8rmvn838n3zdmh5hgwvf8gvk4xdnsg4p8qwhl6w4
I canât imagine why anyone would answer these, but then again, most people who do probably also use âpassword123â as a password.
nostr:note1nsdtatjvt8nxdl7h9a8rmvn838n3zdmh5hgwvf8gvk4xdnsg4p8qwhl6w4
Hey nostr:npub1aeh2zw4elewy5682lxc6xnlqzjnxksq303gwu2npfaxd49vmde6qcq4nwx, random question. Whatâs the name of your first pet? Asking for a friend.
Funny you should ask!
When I was growing up in my hometown of Sheboygan, Wisconsin, at the age of 5 (this would have been in 1989) we got a hamster named Mr. Pickles. My mom wanted to name him Dodger (because it rhymed with her maiden name Rogers) but we drew straws, and Pickles it was. I still remember cruising down Lakeshore Road (the street we lived on) coming home from the pet store in our â84 Cadillac DeVille, the same car I learned to drive in.
WaiiiiitaminuteâŚare you trying to pull a fast one on me?
This reminds me of something I started doing a while back. I make up random answers and put them in my password manager. Probably kind of risky if I lost my PM, but I do backups. Probably less risky than using real answers everywhere.
I used to have a fake info sheet in a drawer where I'd store fake answers that no one else knows.