Yeah, neat. Is he laughing his way to the bank yet? Did he trade the thing with real monies?
yes&yes
*sighs*
Oh, the question was serious? I thought we were just being assholes for no apparent reason.
"Unfortunately I wrote the code down incorrectly and was locked out. I've come to expect pretty poor customer service from crypto exchanges, especially when it comes to account access, so when I was able to get back into my account within 2 days I was extremely pleased."
BULLSHIT! If you have real money tied up anywhere, you do not "write codes down incorrectly and get locked out." If you have thousands of dollars at your bank, do you ever "lose how to access your money and become aloof about it."?
If it goes any other way, you are either extremely rich and are playing with money you can toss into a fireplace like Scrooge Mc. Duck, or are a fake crap-ass.
And nobody does the Scrooge Mc. Duck thing. So there we are. Prove otherwise.
I've got a few passwords I am in danger of mis-remembering....with more than the guy's 'portfolio'.
Oh, come on. You can't really believe that micro$oft, et al., are really increasing security by making you find a unique password (to them) every 6 months....Well, better eat kelp and fish-oil, get those memory-cell juices flowing then, yeah? Unbelievable. The truth of the matter is, you are not forgetting what money you have in what accounts. You are just being facetious.
Oh, come on. You can't really believe that micro$oft, et al., are really increasing security by making you find a unique password (to them) every 6 months....
This obviously creates a weak password through normalization of passwords to every different place you use them...or a strong password that is beyond the capacity of ordinary memory to keep it unique, unrecorded, and complex.
If you don't have this problem, you have "poor" password. If you do have this problem, it's recorded or normalized....and the worst thing is this is the "password paradox" entirely foreseeable, and entirely foreseen.