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AlexTFish's avatar

Yes, "use a different password everywhere" is one of the common pieces of advice. I don't see how that's possible unless you also follow the common advice "use a secure password manager" - where the idea is you just memorise one very strong password and let the app generate meaningless different passwords for everything. I know some people who speak very highly of LastPass. I could never be bothered with that, but the Google password manager is integrated with Chrome and Android and very easy to use. So like you, I have some old insecure passwords I use on sites I signed up for long ago, although I have checked nothing important is on any of those. I have a few memorised very secure passwords for banks and my Google account, which also all have 2FA. And everything else is random generated gibberish I don't remember and don't need to because I never need to type it myself, just let my browser or phone auto fill it.

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David Cornish's avatar

Often a good starting point for most is to secure your email account with a unique good password and ideally multi-factor authentication. As you found, if they can get into your email (which is made more likely when its the same password as something else) then it makes sorting out other things much harder.

NCSC have some good guidance - https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/information-for/individuals-families

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