 Hi, everybody. It's Derek again. And this is tutorial number four. And it's all about creating past phrases and changing your email passwords on GSS. So the share screen here. There we go. And again, we have Firefox and we have let's just start up by saying that a good past phrase is one that is super easy for you to remember and very hard for your adversaries out there to guess. And the longer, the better. Right now, all of our systems are designed to accept passwords up to 50 characters long. So that's a lot. Right now, for the test account, I'm going to show you what the password is to give you an idea and use phrases that make sense to me. And now let's use camel case and a punctuation character and a number at the end. And that way, when I go to change it, I can use the exact same phrase I have to do is increment the number by one digit. So let's edit this part of me. Let's edit it to 43. And we'll leave there. Well, copy it. And then I'll go here. And we'll go into GSS. Now, when you change your password, it now re-loads our current one. So I'm going to do that, hit update. And it's good. And then I go back here. And it saves changes. Okay. Now, when I log out, I'll go again. It uses the one we rated only it's one digit more. And this is super easy to do. Think of something like, well, this is not my actual password. But in the past, I have used things like life, the universe and everything equals 42, which is from Douglas Adams, Douglas Adams books on the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Or you can do a thing like Derek had a Mustang Ford Mustang 1969. And this is true. Any kind of thing that is personal to you, and you find it very easy to remember, add some punctuation. Another thing you could do, for example, is change the punctuation to a dot. Did I copy it? Let's make sure. Now, let's update and see what it says. Yeah. Yeah. Now, when they go back here, look, there it is. It went through the okay thing for me. The whole point is, this is way easy to do. And you can put a reminder in your calendar for every five months or so to go through and change it and increment by one digit. And the same one I've been using the same bass phrase now for years on end. Because all you have to do is change the digit once. So there's that. Let's do this for you. Okay. Let's log down. Let's put in some bad data. Now, is it going to tell you you put in bad data? Maybe you forgot. I don't understand how anybody could put in bad data, because I always have the browser remembered from me. So I'm going to assume the browser is wrong. I need to fix that. So I'm going to say, okay. Now, we don't want to update that. What we want to do is this breathe head and I'll go have a look. Stop that share. Well, share. Let's see. Might you in here, we find a pass. Hit control C. Stop that share. Go back to windows and hit reload. And now we want to put that in there. Now we hit login. We don't want to update. Not really. What we want to hear is that temporary one. And we want to go here. And we're going to add this and change it to 44. And it's good. Yeah. Well, I'll update it and see what happens here. Yeah. Look at that. So those are the ways to deal with resetting your passwords. I'll say one last thing about past phrases. Super long ones that are in excess of 20 characters are almost impossible to break. And if you do camel case, like I do, like how many is it? By the way, one, two, three, four, seven, eight, 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 20. That's a 28 character past phrase. It's super easy to remember. In camel case, it's amazing how easy it is to do something like this. Especially if you think to yourself, think of a simple sentence when those spaces in camel case, and then you're done. Okay. Let's cancel here. And we'll get out of here. And I will finish again by saying, if you need help, you can send me a line and I'll meet with you in Zoom. Bye now.