I Am a Man of Many Accounts

I don’t do any banking on my phone . My husband takes care of all of that. If I want to look up a recipe I just do a Google search. I don’t watch the news so that’s an easy one.
Medical offices? I use the phone to make appointments. Health sites? If I have questions I ask Chat GPT or do my own Google search.
I don't bank over the phone either. But I can look up my accounts and take care of business on my desktop. My doctor's office often connects with me via email to let know when there have been updates on my portal. I don't watch news but I do have subscriptions to various newspapers and magazines that are delivered electronically.

It might sound complicated, but my life is enriched by all these options - I've received great content over the years. It's easy to delete or unsubscribe from what doesn't interest me.
 
When I said I don’t bank using my phone, I meant that I don’t have any banking apps on my phone. My husband does ALL our banking. He has all the app’s on his phone.
I used to belong to a few other forums but I’m bad at remembering my user name.
 
Well, that's sounds self aggrandizing enough to get people's attention, but what I wanted to do was rant about all the internet garbage sites that think they're so important that I must set up an account with them. Some are necessary if they are used often such as:

Walmart for ordering and curbside pickup.
Amazon for loyal customers.
Streaming services who require monthly access to your checking account.
Etc.

But one time purchases for odd items, where you are unlikely to visit ever again, but consider themselves something on the order of Marshall Fields or Sears? A couple of years ago I bought a light switch that would automatically turn the light on inside my grandfathers clock once a week when it was time to wind. It came, but then I needed an app to run it with my phone, so I downloaded that, and it was free and straight forward.

I used it for a couple of years. Then a few weeks ago the app required me to sign up for an account or it would no longer work. What does that have to do with using a thing I'd already bought? I refused, as I often times do when some piddly outfit wants me to have an account with them for some service which itself is unnecessary. I also found a more convenient substitute reminder.

Years ago I started downloading things that required accounts. I saved my user names and passwords in a special file not connected to the internet. I now have a list of passwords for services I don't use. It numbers over a hundred.That's just for things I never use anymore. And of course, they all want their password to be one of a kind, along with my address, phone number, and whatever else they think I will give them.

OK, I'm done. I feel better. Thanks.
I think many of us are folks with many accounts. It's a pita but sometimes an a necessary evil if we aren't shopping in store somewhere.
 
Just yesterday I was in the process of ordering a new pair of shoes on a web site. As I was going through the checkout I was asked to sign in or become a member in order to complete the transaction.
It's just a web site that sells shoes. Nope, nada, no thank you.. (n)
 
When I said I don’t bank using my phone, I meant that I don’t have any banking apps on my phone. My husband does ALL our banking. He has all the app’s on his phone.
I meant the same. :)

I oversee most of our accounts, but only via my desktop and with complex PWs. Neither DH nor I are able to access any accounts via our phones. Quite intentionally.

Our phones can't be used to purchase anything - not from Amazon, Walmart or other stores.

No Google pay, Apple pay, banking links, Zelle, Venmo, credit cards or banking access. The only debit card we have is locked - so it's only for ID purposes when I go to my bank. DH has no debit card because he doesn't want one.

He prefers to go into his bank - other than rarely using mine when the kids were little and I couldn't get out (so we're talking 35 years ago), he's never used a DC.
 
There is a site called temp-mail.org that will give you a remporary email address and then sit there waiting for incoming verification emails until you close the page. So I sign up for those annoying sites uaing that email, then verify the incoming email and when I close the site that email is gone forever. Been doing this for years. Some sites recognize them and disallow it but mostly it works fine.
 
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