| Lets see: Gmail - no Outlook - no Protonmail - no Tutanota - no GitHub - yes Dropbox - no Standard Notes - no FC2 - no Amazon - yes iTunes - no GOG.com - no Steam - no itch.io - no Twitter - no YouTube - no FC2 (repeated above) HN - yes Stack Overflow - no Discord - no Linkedin - no Netflix - no Spotify - no Mubi - no Grammarly - no eBay - yes Bitwarden - no SimpleLogin.io - no Firefox Relay - no Firefox Lockwise - no So, 28 listed (removing the duplicate) yet only have four accounts. > What is your approach? A local (no cloud, not 'online') password manager. A manager is the only /reasonable/ alternative for tracking all the various sites that all want one to register an account for this or that use. > Do you maintain 100+ accounts? My password manager has about 350 "entries" in it -- not all of the "entries" are "online accounts". So taking 75% of that as likely "online accounts" that comes out to about 262 "accounts". Do note that most of those are retailers from which I've purchased once, but that failed to have a "guest purchase" option. The 'core' day-to-day usage entres over any given time period amounts to likely about 5-15 total. > Don't you think having 100+ accounts (even with a password manager) takes a mental toll on you? Not at all, because all the effort of "remembering" is handled by the manager. That is one of the benefits of using a password manager, all the effort of remembering "do I have an account here" and "what is the user-id/password for that account" is handled by the manager, which is a massive mental simplification. When a given account is needed, a short search either finds it, or I just add another to track it for reuse later. |
For those retailer accounts that don't offer guest logins, I would immediately request a deletion of my account. For the other accounts like Visual Studio C++, I just use a throwaway email address and enter fake information.