Word: password
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...program then asked students for a new password, but would not accept words resembling those in dictionaries. Suggestions were given for students unable to come up with passwords of their own. One request generated passwords such as "16ilut" and "k9tig5...
...true and false statements on the quiz included: "There's nothing wrong with forwarding chain letters, as long as no money is involved," "Harvard's computers may not be used for pranks or practical jokes" and "A computer Systems Administrator or User Assistant may ask me for my password in order to provide assistance...
Joshua Glassman '02 said he thought the quiz was informative and easy, but that finding a new password was difficult...
...encourage that sort of relationship, patients should follow a few important rules. First, remember that e-mail is not a perfectly private medium. If you're writing from the office, even if you use a password, your employer has the legal right to read your messages. Encryption works only if you and your doctor choose the same program, which can be tough to coordinate. So I recommend that you confine your e-mail messages to routine inquiries: appointment scheduling, follow-up questions after a checkup, requests for a prescription refill or a referral. Stanford University Medical Clinic forbids discussion...
...system to its corporate customers. Its $99 Fingerprint Identification Technology requires users to place a fingertip on a miniature scanner attached to their monitor. Once the image has been verified with a master print on file, users can access the company network without having to remember an ever-changing password...