Comment by jopsen Comment by jopsen 19 hours ago 5 replies Copy Link View on Hacker News Print out 2FA codes and bury them somewhere.It's not that hard, and you feel like a proper spy doing it ;)
Copy Link vorpalhex 17 hours ago Collapse Comment - Please don't depend on this. Paper does not like moisture and soil is full of it.Use an escrow or custodian (lawyer, bank, etc). Reply View | 4 replies Copy Link thesmok 2 hours ago Parent Next Collapse Comment - Paper inside a plastic bottle will be fine. Reply View | 1 reply Copy Link vorpalhex an hour ago Root Parent Collapse Comment - Soil is acidic, and soda bottles are meant to keep their seal for a two years, not a decade. Reply View | 0 replies Copy Link DengistKhan 9 hours ago Parent Prev Collapse Comment - laminate? Reply View | 1 reply Copy Link vorpalhex an hour ago Root Parent Collapse Comment - Is your laminate rated to be in constant soil contact for however many years you need to hold onto a backup code for? Reply View | 0 replies
Copy Link thesmok 2 hours ago Parent Next Collapse Comment - Paper inside a plastic bottle will be fine. Reply View | 1 reply Copy Link vorpalhex an hour ago Root Parent Collapse Comment - Soil is acidic, and soda bottles are meant to keep their seal for a two years, not a decade. Reply View | 0 replies
Copy Link vorpalhex an hour ago Root Parent Collapse Comment - Soil is acidic, and soda bottles are meant to keep their seal for a two years, not a decade. Reply View | 0 replies
Copy Link DengistKhan 9 hours ago Parent Prev Collapse Comment - laminate? Reply View | 1 reply Copy Link vorpalhex an hour ago Root Parent Collapse Comment - Is your laminate rated to be in constant soil contact for however many years you need to hold onto a backup code for? Reply View | 0 replies
Copy Link vorpalhex an hour ago Root Parent Collapse Comment - Is your laminate rated to be in constant soil contact for however many years you need to hold onto a backup code for? Reply View | 0 replies
Please don't depend on this. Paper does not like moisture and soil is full of it.
Use an escrow or custodian (lawyer, bank, etc).