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So, password managers? I keep reading news articles about how they’re a good thing, and a LOT safer than writing all your passwords down. I write them down in code, but I have no illusions my code is uncrackable. So I should probably get one.
Which is the best? And are all the journalists right that password managers are actually safe? Because it seems counter-intuitive to put all your passwords in one place and then hope that one place doesn’t get hacked.
Which is the best? And are all the journalists right that password managers are actually safe? Because it seems counter-intuitive to put all your passwords in one place and then hope that one place doesn’t get hacked.
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Date: 2022-04-11 01:13 am (UTC)I used to have LastPass, bu they got bought out by some other company and hiked up their prices, so I dropped hem. And Bitwarden gave me an option to import everything I had saved in LastPass, so that worked out well.
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Date: 2022-04-11 04:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-04-11 03:03 am (UTC)It does make things faster, just having passwords autofill. But I keep a written list because I know I'm going to forget some of them if I never have to type them in by hand any more. Having a home desktop computer, I keep the list out of plain sight but the logic there is that if someone's in my house going through stuff....I got bigger problems.
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Date: 2022-04-11 04:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-04-11 06:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-04-11 04:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-04-11 04:41 pm (UTC)I like that I can create separate vaults and share them with the other people in my Family plan. For example, I created a vault to share with my son, but he only has access to that shared vault and not to my other passwords. And I created a vault specifically for my work-related passwords, so I can keep them separate from my personal ones.
It also lets you securely store credit card accounts, secure notes, software licenses, etc.
It makes my life easier in a lot of ways. I do wonder what would ever happen if 1Password got hacked, but there are a lot of steps a hacker would still need to take to actually break into each user's specific account. And using a password manager allows me to create a unique password for every single one of the many, many accounts I have, which I think is the most important thing.
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Date: 2022-04-12 12:57 pm (UTC)And I am definitely a Mac person, have both an iPhone and a MacBook, so if these products are built to mesh well with Apple
products, that also sounds good. Some stuff was clearly designed for Windows computers and Android operating systems, with Mac users tacked on as an afterthought. If 1Password started out as a Mac product, that’s a good sign.