Never use real passwords in public screenshots. The example above is fake. Step 2: Encrypt Before Uploading (Critical) A plain text file on GitHub is not secure if someone gets into your account. Always encrypt sensitive files. Option A: Use a password manager (Recommended) Export your passwords from Bitwarden/1Password as an encrypted JSON, not plain text. Option B: GPG encryption (For techies) gpg -c wifi-passwords.txt # This creates wifi-passwords.txt.gpg Upload only the .gpg file to GitHub. To decrypt later:
# Wi-Fi Network Credentials # Last updated: 2025-03-15 [Home Network] SSID: MyHome_5G Password: 8x$H9!kLp@2qRt Security: WPA2 Notes: Main router in living room wifi password txt github
[Guest Network] SSID: MyHome_Guest Password: welcome123guest Security: WPA2 Notes: Limited to 10Mbps Never use real passwords in public screenshots
We have all been there. A friend comes over, you get a new phone, or your laptop factory resets, and suddenly—you cannot remember the Wi-Fi password. It’s that 16-character mix of numbers, letters, and symbols your ISP printed on a faded sticker three years ago. Always encrypt sensitive files
Don't be that person. Manage your own, encrypt your data, and you'll never be locked out of your own router again. Share it with a friend who always asks for your Wi-Fi password twice a week. And remember—with great password power comes great responsibility.
[Work Office - Conference Room] SSID: Office-WiFi Password: meeting#2025