I say this as I have been trying to help my 80 year old dad over the last two week try to recover from a social engineering hack where he gave the other side FULL remote access to his MacBook Pro where he conveniently saved all his passwords to EVERYTHING in an excel file (including the his kids and grandkids names, DOB, SSN). Something that would have been harder (not impossible) to do on an iPad.
This is the stuff that keeps me up at night. Helped my parents with a password issue and went to change something in their iCloud Keychain and there was a sea of "compromised password" alerts. All I remember is everything went white and tasted like purple and I snapped out 30 minutes later when I was called to the dinner table. I brought it up to them but I really don't expect anything to be changed as they don't even bother to remember their own email passwords.
We really need to hurry up with passwordless credentials as I can't even get people my own age to invest in even free password managers.
iPilot05 and
Gandhim3,
Being in the same age bracket as your parents—but a little more security-conscious, I solved the problem with a couple of 20th-Century technologies—Post It notes and a ballpoint pen. I bought a pair of
these plastic boxes over the Web from Walmart for US$6 plus shipping. They're not incredibly sturdy, although the first one has lasted for a couple of years so far. I simply print the name of the organization/relative underlined on the first line of each Post It note and alphabetize them in the box; your parents
probably still remember how to print and alphabetize.

So I don't keep any sensitive information on my computer, though it's a bit less convenient.
On this subject I now have a cautionary tale, about something that recently happened to a friend of my late ex-wife's. Her former physical therapist had moved from NYC to Virginia, but sent me an e-mail of consolation when she got the news of of my ex-wife's death—via a broadcast sent out by my ex-wife's co-executor using e-mail addresses I had copied from my ex-wife's computer when he got me access to it. On 11 October I received an e-mail with no recipient list, saying
Hello, are you free at the moment?
Thanks.
I replied asking what kind of "catching up" she wanted to do with me, and this was followed the same day by an e-mail
I need to get a Google Play gift card for a friend who is down with cancer of the Liver, it's her birthday today and I promised to get it for her, I cannot do this right now because we traveled for a friend's burial who lost her life to Coronavirus(Covid-19). and all my effort purchasing it online proved abortive? Can you get it from any store around you for me? I'll reimburse you upon my arrival.
Kindly let me know if you can handle this so I can tell you the amount and how to get them to me.
Await your soonest response.
The message sounded fishy to me, so I e-mailed my ex-wife's friend back saying so. When I belatedly looked at the sending address and realized it was from a
similar-looking address on outlook.com, I again e-mailed the friend—strongly urging her to change the password on her
real e-mail account overnight before the hacker could block any incoming messages. I've since tried to get a Virginia phone number for the friend, but have so far been unsuccessful.
Edit: Deleted one-word last sentence in last paragraph, because—as
Vincent Hanna said below—it was a detour into off-topic-ness.
P.S.: Just to finish the "cautionary tale" in my final paragraph, my ex-wife's friend replied to my 12 October e-mail in the early afternoon of 14 October:
Oh David thank you. I didn't even get this response bc the hackers set it to Trash! I did change my password but had a computer person here and worked with AOL it is a mess.
Thank goodness I
did get the idea "Your e-mail account has been hacked, I think!" through to her, even without having her current phone number.