Personal Identi cation Numbers (PINs) are widely used as an access control mechanism for digital assets (e.g., smartphones), nancial assets (e.g., ATM cards), and physical assets (e.g., locks for garage doors or homes). Using semistructured interviews (n=35), participants reported on PIN usage for di erent types of assets, including how users choose, share, inherit, and reuse PINs, as well as behaviour following the compromise of a PIN. We nd that memorability is the most important criterion when choosing a PIN, more so than security or concerns of reuse. Updating or changing a PIN is very uncommon, even when a PIN is compromised. Participants reported sharing PINs for one type of asset with acquaintances but inadvertently reused them for other assets, thereby subjecting themselves to potential risks. Participants also reported using PINs originally set by previous homeowners for physical devices (e.g., alarm or keypad door entry systems). While aware of the risks of not updating PINs, this did not always deter participants from using inherited PINs, as they were often missing instructions on how to update them. Given the expected increase in PIN-protected assets (e.g., loyalty cards, smart locks, and web apps), we provide suggestions and future research directions to better support users with multiple digital and non-digital assets and more secure human-device interaction when utilizing PINs.
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