RE: Penny Freeman, former staffer in tears over Ron Paul betrayals

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Penny Freeman, former staffer in tears over Ron Paul betrayals

in politics •  7 years ago 

I know that I did not write the original password down on paper. But I did copy it on the computer and still have it. It is different than the one that steemit says I have now. Which I have copied on computer and paper.
Should I go through the process of generating another password again?

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Don't change your password unless your current password is compromised. If you're still the only one who knows it, WRITE IT DOWN ON PAPER, and keep that paper with your important stuff.
Then, go to your Wallet, and click Permissions. Copy and paste those "keys" into a text file and save it somewhere, apart from your main password which is on paper.
Then you can log out of that browser without worrying you'll never get back into Steemit. But of course, don't do that until you're sure you've got your correct current password safely written on paper.
Sorry to be redundant with the instructions but it's quite important.
Also, I'm not the expert in this stuff, I'm just trying to help you because you asked. I'm pretty sure it's correct but don't quote me.

That's my problem. I don't think that my password is right. When I copy and paste it into the login when I try to use Chrome instead of Firefox, it tells me that it is the wrong password. When I try the original that I saved in notepad on the computer, it tells me the same thing.
I cannot figure out what my current correct password is.
And I have written them both down on paper. Neither works.

"I cannot figure out what my current correct password is."
Then at some point, you ignored several warnings begging you to write your password down before continuing, and soon you'll lose access forever. It informs you that your password can never be retrieved, and if you lose it, your account is gone. It's not possible to be given your original password, or to change it to a new one, without seeing that step. It's impossible to skip. It warns you that you'll lose your account if you don't copy down the password on paper. You were then forced to type it in, to confirm that you copied it down correctly, before gaining access to your account. So at some point, you DID have your correct password. It can't be changed without going through that whole process again - typing in the old password, writing down the new password, and then confirming it in a later step by typing it back in off the paper.
If you really managed to lose your only copy, then yeah, you'll soon need a new account. You won't treat your password so carelessly next time!