You're not really safe putting your data on a thumb drive
The thumb drive is on my keychain in my pants, along with my smartphone, so if they get those, I'm probably dead and really don't care anymore.
What should also be explored is a way to reset all passwords in the event someone steals your computer.
That's my biggest fear when I'm away from home is if my home computer becomes compromised someone can take control over everything I own.
Paranoid?
I once heard a sad tale at PubCon from a guy that hired some outsource guy to manage his server from Romania. The guy had access to his email on the server and used that to hijack all his accounts, reset their passwords, and stole his domain names and held them for ransom. Then took the money and asked for more!
Could have just as easily happened from a hacker, which has been in the news more that a few times lately.
Just to point out you should NOT give anyone access to anywhere that they can gain access to the email account used to control your domains and such. Bad idea.
Also shows you should spread your accounts across more than one email account perhaps, or as I've done on some that allow it, install dual email accounts so if they don't remove it, I can reset their reset ;)
Too many eggs tied to one email basket allowed hackers to wipe out a reporters complete Apple collection:
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wired.com...]
Of course that was due to stupid people giving up information over the phone, and you can always rely on the stupidity of others to undo your best laid security plans.
More importantly, if the service on one server with your primary email account goes down, which has happened to me, you need to be able to manage things from an alternate account so doing something simple like moving a domain to a new server that might require email validation doesn't suddenly turn into a nightmare. Happened a few years ago thanks to a major outage, I made the appropriate changes ;)
In the end it doesn't matter how well you plan, something will eventually hit the fan leaving you with an "AH HA" moment LOL
In the end, Google doesn't believe in tech support, that's the real problem we have here. If an algo can't solve your problem you're screwed. Thus the plight of Farmboy and his AdSense crops as they languish in limbo.