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Not to throw cold water on the fun...
But be careful. These types of funny surveys can be used for social engineering to get the answers to two of the most common password security questions: "What is the name of your first pet?" And "What was the name of your childhood street?"

A former employer got compromised by a similar method that circulated on social media.

Just an FYI. Be safe. Don't use any answers you would use for security questions.
 
Not to throw cold water on the fun...
But be careful. These types of funny surveys can be used for social engineering to get the answers to two of the most common password security questions: "What is the name of your first pet?" And "What was the name of your childhood street?"

A former employer got compromised by a similar method that circulated on social media.

Just an FYI. Be safe. Don't use any answers you would use for security questions.
Lol, let's get one of these warnings per page.

The scammers probably aren't scraping NWFA for user information, but you never know, and it's better to be in good habits anyway. Keep your online social shenanigans as separate from your account and IRL info as possible.

And if anyone did give an answer they also used as a security question maybe go change that for good measure.
 
Not to throw cold water on the fun...
But be careful. These types of funny surveys can be used for social engineering to get the answers to two of the most common password security questions: "What is the name of your first pet?" And "What was the name of your childhood street?"

A former employer got compromised by a similar method that circulated on social media.

Just an FYI. Be safe. Don't use any answers you would use for security questions.

Lol, let's get one of these warnings per page.

The scammers probably aren't scraping NWFA for user information, but you never know, and it's better to be in good habits anyway. Keep your online social shenanigans as separate from your account and IRL info as possible.

And if anyone did give an answer they also used as a security question maybe go change that for good measure.
Like that LifeLock CEO whose SSN ended up being stolen 13 times? :s0140:

 
Blackey B... Yeah, I can go with that... o_O

And no, I have never used either of these names for answers to password reset challenge questions.
 
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There is such a thing? 🤔
Considering the company we keep here, yeah I can see why that would be a question. We are, after all, having this conversation in a thread specifically about our porn names:s0140:

Good taste was never our forte it seems.
 
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Like that LifeLock CEO whose SSN ended up being stolen 13 times? :s0140:

lol yeah I remember that. I applaud the guy for really putting faith in his company's services, but as we all found out even solid identity management services have limits. They can only protect against identity thefts the know about, and not all such theft is immediately obvious and actionable. Some of that stuff happens on good old paper, or with entities that only report new activity on infrequent intervals. There is a lot thieves can get away with in the interim, and that can cause quite a lot of headache even for good identity management services.
 

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