What's the Problem?
Typical password policies require you to remember long passwords with special symbols and digits to ensure you're not picking simple dictionary words. Add in the common best practice rules that you should never duplicate passwords and you shouldn't write passwords down, and we have a memory problem that warrants careful consideration.
Think about your password strategy. Do you reuse passwords for any of the sites you visit? Do you write passwords down now and then? Do you reset your passwords constantly? Let's solve that.
You can use a software password safe, but then that too becomes a hacking target. One password reveals everything.
How it Works
Rotate the wheels on the SphinxGadget to spell out the first letters of any domain name, and then read the characters through the viewfinder.
Every SphinxGadget provides over 17000 random password fragments that satisfy typical password policies (special symbol, capital letter, number).
You supply your own common password.
Now you can remember just one thing instead of dozens.
How is this Better?
SphinxGadgets keep passwords offline and secure the way they were meant to be.
Most password managers are connected targets for hackers, but SphinxGadgets are not software and don't contain the entireity of your password.
Losing control of your SphinxGadget won't expose your passwords, because they are split between the gadget and your memory.
Consider it another option to store passwords outside your browser's, somewhat vulnerable, password cache.
Introducing the SphinxGadget
Got Logos?
Want to show your workforce that you care a little bit about Cybersecurity? Put your logo on a SphinxGadget and give them a unique piece of swag this year. Talk to us about patterns, colors, fonts, and we'll put it together. We'd love to work with you, and we think the price is right.