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Trust Password: Difference between revisions

added example
("Truth in Television"->"Real Life")
(added example)
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* ''[[Winter War]]'': How do you convince someone who's been [[Master of Illusion|Aizen's]] prisoner for ''months'' that you really are you? {{spoiler|You hand him his [[Empathic Weapon|zanpakutou]]- which will do the convincing for you.}}
* [http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums/showthread.php?tid=6210&pid=87548#pid87548 An abandoned passage] from ''[[Drunkard's Walk]]'' includes an example of this trope that's also a [[Shout-Out]] to ''[[Back to the Future]]''.
* In the ''[[Harry Potter]]'' fic ''[https://archiveofourown.org/works/23702959/chapters/56911591 That Universe Over There]'' by "mytimeconsumingsidehobby", Harry and his younger, [[Gender Flip]]ped dimensional counterpart Ivy have a Trust Password between them, "sweetie", which gets used at least twice over the extant course of the story:
{{quote|“Okay, I’m just going to cast a couple spells on you sweetie. Nothing bad, just need to check a few things.”
Ivy, recognizing their code word for I-need-you-to-trust-me-and-just-go-with-this, nodded and walked the rest of the way over to where Harry stood...}}
:The phrasing here implies there might be others, but they haven't appeared in the story yet.
 
 
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== [[Real Life]] ==
* According to tradition, [[Joan of Arc]] whispered some secret to the Dauphin to convince him that she had really been divinely inspired to help him claim the throne. According to additional tradition, what she whispers is that God wants him to be king of France, though some prefer to believe that she described an embarrassing birthmark on his backside.
* Magician [[Harry Houdini]] had spent much of his later career debunking mediums and others who claimed to speak "from beyond the grave". He arranged a number of code phrases (one being a song called "Rosabelle") as identifiers for his wife Bess if such communication was possible. He died in 1926, well before Bess. No one was ever able to deliver a message she was satisfied was genuine.
** [[Take That|Funny how "paranormal experts" never bring that up.]]
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* Careful parents often arrange these with their children, so that the children can verify that anyone who claims to be sent by mom and dad actually was (as in the [[Bones]] example above). Some PSAs (or similar productions) recommend this if the family ever gets separated.
* Surprisingly more common than most people think. It's extremely easy to set up, and it never hurts to be [[Crazy Prepared]] or [[Genre Savvy]].
*** There was a website many years ago (it's long since dead) that was touted as a "time-traveler's support network." Meeting places and times in various cities were designated where a "volunteer" from the project would wait for someone to say a one-time use passphrase and render aid. The database of locations, times, and phrases was said to exist in a sealed document held by a law firm which would be turned over to any time-travel project in the future.
*** It may be long since dead now, but if you're going back in time that shouldn't really be a problem.
* As in the ''Bourne'' example above, secret agents normally have security checks they can insert into a message to verify that it's real. During [[World War II]], one British agent captured by the Germans deliberately gave his captors the wrong security check. He expected his bosses to realize that the messages coming from his radio were false. [[What an Idiot!|His bosses didn't pay attention.]] ''Das Englandspiel'' (also called Operation North Pole) resulted in the capture and execution of approximately fifty Allied agents, and didn't end until the Germans themselves called it off in a clear-text message to London..
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