MARJORIE MCCRACKEN
Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2025
Nice
MKH
Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2025
Works great
Jackie chriest
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2025
pocket size and has enough pages for everything
Julywoman
Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2024
I like the small size of this lined password book. Plenty of room in this book to change passwords & it is arranged in alphabetical order. Easy to hide and can’t be hacked.
Christina Ontiveros
Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2024
Got my boss this as a gift and they use it everyday as they have many sites they need access to. Great price too.
Ridley-Alysanne
Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2024
Got this to use as a copy/backup of my tiny black book with the 3 owls on the cover. I do like the way the alphabet pages are tabbed in the owl book, it's the main difference between the two, but other than that this does what it's supposed to
Stucco
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2023
As someone who works in the IT security profession and interacts face-to-face with folks to help them learn new protocols to keep their and their employer's information safe, we often tell them that books like this are a VERY BAD idea. And for the most part, they are. But they do have their uses:For example, password books like this one by Oxford can be quite useful as a record to keep stored under lock and key, away from your computer, not for you to use, but for use in the case anything should happen to you and your loved ones need to be able to access your accounts if you are incapacitated or, worst case scenario, deceased.Though morbid, that is really the best-case use for a book like this. Otherwise, it's more of a liability than it is a helpful tool, especially in an age where our computers have built-in password storage and processes that recommend stronger than average passwords (not just your pet's name with the year of your birth). Maybe also an exclamation mark because your computer insisted you needed it.While most attempts to crack into one of your accounts happens remotely with the culprit never seeing you or being within 100 feet of where you live, a book like this DOES expose you to substantial risk in the event anyone ever breaks into your home or workplace and finds this on or in your desk. At which point, you've just given them an instruction manual to your accounts AND lost your own copy. Which is why we tell people NOT to rely on books like this as a daily or even occasional use kind of tool.Because most people, once they bring it out of its hiding spot, rarely remember to return it there and just keep it in an obvious spot as they come to rely on it for a memory aid.Don't be that person. It's more likely to harm you in the long-term than really help you.Use something like this as way for loved ones to access your accounts in worst-case scenarios, but that's about the only time this should come out of a safe after you've written down any secure information in it.***Overall Value***As a reference for your loved ones in a worst-case scenario, it's invaluable.As an everyday reference, this little book is a bad idea.So, as long as you intend to use it in the former case, definitely pick one of these up, fill it out, and then store it away somewhere VERY secure away from your computer, maybe even keep it with your last will and testament as that's exactly when someone should be using this book.
Vera Norris
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2023
Easy to organize and title logins for computer