\(o_O)/
― J0rdan S., Tuesday, 14 December 2010 05:41 (fifteen years ago)
Hmm, mine is on that list as well, though the e-mail address I used was a secondary anonymous-y one, so I don't know that it can be traced to anything other than that e-mail account.
― would like a calmer set (Eazy), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 05:41 (fifteen years ago)
if the password you gave gawker was unique, you're fine
― caek, Tuesday, 14 December 2010 11:55 (fifteen years ago)
cool i've used 'unique' for all my passwords
― just sayin, Tuesday, 14 December 2010 12:21 (fifteen years ago)
you weren't kidding
― just sayin (dayo), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 12:30 (fifteen years ago)
hey caek it looks like your gawker password was unique too...also your ilx one
― caek (dayo), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 12:30 (fifteen years ago)
lol
― caek, Tuesday, 14 December 2010 12:56 (fifteen years ago)
http://www.observer.com/2010/media/turning-gawker-itself
― buzza, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 04:45 (fifteen years ago)
But there was also the very real chance that editors and writers across the city could now be outed publicly for dissing their bosses in private. One Gawker and Jezebel commenter with a Condé Nast email address, for instance, had written in about making up quotes at a women's magazine; the condition of Anna Wintour's 60-year-old skin; and her experiences with both circumcised and uncircumcised penises. Twenty-six readers registered with Times email addresses, 21 from Condé Nast, 12 from Time Inc., 18 from Hearst, nine from The Journal, six from the Post and three from the Daily News. An untold number more used harder-to-detect private accounts. But searching for media coworkers—and rivals—became as simple as plugging their personal email addresses into an easily downloadable 72-megabyte text file, a 1.3 million-entry fantasia of byline hunting. Did Jeffrey Toobin really register with the name "ValentinoAgamemnon"?
― would like a calmer set (Eazy), Wednesday, 15 December 2010 04:59 (fifteen years ago)
http://www.unconditionalconfidence.com/mt/mt-static/FCKeditor/UserFiles/Image/nervous.gif
― vladimir pootawn (am0n), Wednesday, 15 December 2010 05:06 (fifteen years ago)
http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2010/12/13/the-top-50-gawker-media-passwords/
― dayo, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 05:37 (fifteen years ago)
trustno1
― markers, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 05:38 (fifteen years ago)
'trustno1' is pretty good, as in, people with that password probably expected gawker or some other site to get hacked, probably use diff passwords for important stuff, and are probably safe. or maybe they're just stupid
― dayo, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 05:38 (fifteen years ago)
At least two popular passwords are science-fiction references: “trustno1″ was Special Agent Mulder’s password on “The X-Files,”
― dayo, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 05:39 (fifteen years ago)
afaict the passwords confirm what we already know, gawker's demographics skews towards huge fucking internet nerd
― dayo, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 05:40 (fifteen years ago)
lol @ pokemon
― k3vin k., Wednesday, 15 December 2010 06:08 (fifteen years ago)
wonder which one j0rdan's was
whoa I had no idea the situation was that serious before reading that article
― iatee, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 06:29 (fifteen years ago)
I had an ex-girlfriend who had trustno1 as her gmail/facebook password
no kidding
― mh, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 17:09 (fifteen years ago)
including u, eh?
― would like a calmer set (Eazy), Wednesday, 15 December 2010 17:10 (fifteen years ago)
no joshua?
― http://tinyurl.com/ccccccccccccccccc (Pleasant Plains), Wednesday, 15 December 2010 17:14 (fifteen years ago)
I was relatively trustworthy, only saw it by accident when she typed her password in the username spot once. Well, that part was innocent, at least.
― mh, Wednesday, 15 December 2010 17:17 (fifteen years ago)
here we go again? http://gawker.com/5714043/
― markers, Thursday, 16 December 2010 19:06 (fifteen years ago)
Eh, it's a little much, for sure.
Is there anyone out there who hasn't figured out exactly what he seems to be like in social interactions? He really sounds like every somewhat arrogant, academically intelligent computer nerd. Reminds me of lots of people I've met.
― mh, Thursday, 16 December 2010 19:58 (fifteen years ago)
lol ilx
― Jefferson Mansplain (DG), Thursday, 16 December 2010 20:01 (fifteen years ago)
wow at those emails. whoa
― dell (del), Thursday, 16 December 2010 21:36 (fifteen years ago)
password reset lady at my school just gave me some parting advice: "just stay off of the gawker"
ADVICE TAKEN
― k3vin k., Monday, 20 December 2010 21:34 (fifteen years ago)
my password was "jordan"
― return of the nakh (J0rdan S.), Monday, 20 December 2010 23:53 (fifteen years ago)
― dayo, Wednesday, December 15, 2010 12:37 AM (5 days ago)
― k3vin k., Wednesday, December 15, 2010 1:08 AM (5 days ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
― k3vin k., Wednesday, December 15, 2010 1:08 AM (5 days ago)
^____^
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 21 December 2010 00:04 (fifteen years ago)
comments section:
Reminds me of the time my sister bought my nephew a gift, that she told him was from me, because I upset him and accidentally took his apple or something. I'm allergic to apples to this likely didn't happen and was imagined by my nephew because kids are moody and nonsensical beings. But I did the normal thing and brought him a big bag of apples next time I saw him. My sister kept insisting the toy to appease was from me, but I insisted otherwise.
???
― the red-headed smanger (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 15:42 (fifteen years ago)
actually all the comments here are winners:
http://gawker.com/5715629/ungrateful-little-jerk-embodies-americas-attitude-towards-reading
Either1. Long diatribes about how bad the parents are2. Weird bragging about how they used to read as kids
― the red-headed smanger (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 15:43 (fifteen years ago)
Weird bragging is usually the domain of the jezebel commenters.
― THX THO... (Nicole), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 15:46 (fifteen years ago)
MrKotter 10:57 AMSo your plan is to restore that respect for reading, one Katy Perry post at a time?
So your plan is to restore that respect for reading, one Katy Perry post at a time?
― Tina Tina Cheneuse (DJP), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 15:59 (fifteen years ago)
boom
― the red-headed smanger (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:13 (fifteen years ago)
funniest thing about the WSJ blog entry -- that people actually do "online banking." What a buncha darned fools.
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:17 (fifteen years ago)
?
― the red-headed smanger (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:20 (fifteen years ago)
does that boggle ur stone-age mind or
― vladimir pootawn (am0n), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:25 (fifteen years ago)
other things "darned fools" do "online": shopping, taxes, reading, chatting!?!?!
― vladimir pootawn (am0n), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:29 (fifteen years ago)
would you say you pity these fools?
― the red-headed smanger (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:38 (fifteen years ago)
never been ripped off during online chatting and reading funnily enough
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:45 (fifteen years ago)
I don't think many people are ever ripped off due to online banking, fwiw.
The most you're going to be able to do is view balances, transfer between existing accounts, and view bank account numbers. You know, the same numbers anyone can read off of a check you write.
But checks might be too "damned foolish" too, I don't know.
― mh, Tuesday, 21 December 2010 16:49 (fifteen years ago)
thx for the new display name
― old man yells at cloud computing (am0n), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 17:02 (fifteen years ago)
lool
― ice cr?m, Tuesday, 21 December 2010 17:06 (fifteen years ago)
I prefer barter
also, fuck you am0n
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 17:15 (fifteen years ago)
;-)
― old man yells at cloud computing (am0n), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 18:23 (fifteen years ago)
re: weird bragging, I think that if I were a Gawker/Jezebel writer my #1 priority would be to craft posts that encourage people to share their SAT scores
― A B C, Tuesday, 21 December 2010 20:27 (fifteen years ago)
iirc gawker used to have (or maybe still does have) an 'exclusive' commenter policy, so long story short i nvr got an account
cried my darn eyes out lol
― moholy-nagl (history mayne), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 20:31 (fifteen years ago)
On the plus side no one is using your bank account to buy boats
― mmmm... yung hummus (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 21:02 (fifteen years ago)
Okay, hawkers, you've made your point. I should have used different passwords for each of my accounts, but it was so much easier to remember that my son's birthday followed by my blood type would access my email accounts while the last four digits of my social security number and what my driver's license says I weigh would get me onto ebay, Paypal, Etsy, You Tube, GoDaddy, Amazon and assorted sites I used in my quest to find the tastiest olive oil.
I don't remember ever visiting gawker, but apparently there was a time when I was curious about whether or not Gwyneth Paltrow might have been photographed eating carbs in a trendy Soho restaurant as I had an account. That was my undoing as having a Gawker account made it possible for you to pass yourself off as the online me.
Would you use my Etsy account to buy a hand loomed scarf? My Amazon account to push some obscure author to number one? My PayPal account to score elite tickets to "The Merchant of Venice" or a New York co-op? I was desperate to create new passwords and would now take it more seriously, avoiding using my birthday or schools I'd attended that are published on Facebook, and not being lazy like those who grasp at the most popular passwords: 12345, password, lifehack, qwerty, abc123, 111111, monkey, consumer, 0, letmein, trustno1.
AOL provided instructions for strengthening a password, which helped me arrive at a formula impossible to penetrate. The trick is to mix capital and lower case and accompany the letters with numbers. I capitalized the second letter of Hackers to make my password a most improbable "hAckers" (clever, no?). And I split up the word by inserting my area code, 212, at different points between the letters. I don't mind telling you I feel slightly smug and just hope Julian Assange doesn't spread this around on WikiLeaks.
Seemingly the only site not penetrated by you is my web site - www.sybilsage.com. But you and everyone else should feel free to go there and buy mosaic art with complete confidence that you will be completely secure.
Follow Sybil Adelman Sage on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Sybil Sage
― old man yells at cloud computing (am0n), Tuesday, 21 December 2010 21:14 (fifteen years ago)
it's really amazing how 2 Gawker writers and 20 or so commenters (suckers!) can discuss 'the year in film' and mention exactly one foreign-language title (the crap I Am Love).
really, what is wrong with the Millennials?
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 28 December 2010 01:41 (fifteen years ago)