As if you actually entered your password incorrectly. It’s probably eight characters or the minimum because...well...everybody has their reasons. Maybe you went the extra mile. Maybe it’s longer because you really think that would protect you from an internet robot that’s interested in getting on your Twitter account! That no-good password pilfering robot probably wants to send suspicious links to your friends. www.CashAtHome.com It must be stopped!
But what happened?
Did you really mistype your most sacred eight character phrase? How? It can’t be for lack of practice. Some of you probably use the same password for everything. The login process is largely ritualistic and unconscious. Even if your secret word contains a punctuation mark, only for the most secure passwords of course, you key it in with ease. A capital letter? No sweat! Numbers? Cake! What’s the penalty for being wrong?
This?
Our last defense
against the password robots: Word Art and fuzzy numbers. I used to think
Watson could figure out my password, but now I have my doubts. Why were people
so worried about robots again?
Maybe this is just a ruse. Maybe Twitter just wants to find out how many times you're willing to try to correctly enter the fuzzy numbers and WordArt scrambles just to gain access to your account. It could be a "prove your love" kind of thing. A gauge of allegiance or obedience depending on how you look at it. Either way, some of them are actually hard. You
know, on the really safe sites! Surely you've spent time trying to figure them
out?
Haven’t You?
OneTimeBeing: It certainly occurs on certain websites more often than others. That’s a fact!
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