WSJ: What Keeps People From Using Password Managers?
No pay wall: https://archive.is/HCtcT
Many of us are vulnerable to hackers and eager to secure our online accounts, but lots of us also refuse to use an obvious solution: password managers.
Why? Our research has found that the typical reassurances and promises about password managers just don’t work. Fortunately, our research also suggests there are strategies that can persuade people to get past the psychological barriers and keep their data safe.
[...] In a study I conducted with my Ph.D. student Norah Alkaldi, we found that the two most common methods of persuasion were ineffective in getting people to adopt password managers. The first is the “push” approach—the idea that by showing people the dangers of using simple passwords, recording passwords on their computer or using the same passwords at different sites, we would push them to adopt a safer approach. Users, we found, don’t respond to the push strategy.
[...] The other, “pull,” approach—focusing on the positives of password managers—didn’t deliver any better results.
[...] We discovered two types of “mooring factors” that keep people from changing their behavior.
[...] First, there was the effort required to enter all your passwords into the password manager.
[...] People also fear they will lose all their passwords if they forget their master password.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 18 2021, @09:49PM (2 children)
Really, I hope you're not putting your passwords into paste buffers.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 19 2021, @06:47AM
Really, you should not even touch the keyboard. I saw on Jason Bourne they got the password from how worn out some of the keys were. Noobs.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 19 2021, @06:55AM
If something is reading your paste buffers, your computer is already hopelessly compromised. You already lost.