Hi all,

Need to pick your brains for a bit regarding best practices for handling of account recovery issues while traveling.

Premise would be that my phone gets lost or stolen, and I may not have easy access to my laptop either, and being in a foreign country I couldn’t easily get a copy of the original SIM to restore via OTP.

Consequently, I also don’t really love the idea of using some password manager with a master password and no F2A.

Under those circumstances, what would you consider the best way forward to ensure accessibility without crippling myself in the process?

The only thing I can come up with is a random subdomain on one of my domains, with random username and random password, where I store an encrypted container containing txt-files. Maybe even further obscured with a random cypher (all numbers / letters shifted x positions to the right or something).

But there’s gotta be other use-cases out there, so I was wondering what you are using?

Ideally something that doesn’t involve another person.

Thanks!

  • Darkassassin07
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    That’s still gaining access through a device that’s already signed in/has your password db.

    If you do not have access to a device that’s already signed into your accounts/has a copy of your password db; how do get in?

    Presumably you’re smart enough to not have password only auth on a public facing nextcloud instance if it stores your password db…

    This is the scenario we are discussing. The fact you store you db on other devices is entirely irrelevant.

    • Goku@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      10 months ago

      My nextcloud instance uses fail2ban and I use a >32bit strong password.

      Assuming I lose my phone and my laptop and my personal computer and my nextcloud instance I would be screwed.

      Since I host my own mailserver I would be able to create a new mailserver with a new password though and recover any accounts with a new email.