I use keypass:
https://keepass.info/download.html.

They have linux and browser versions (contributed/unofficial ports).  I use
the windoz version and works well for me.

I did ask a crypto 'expert' recently regarding the safety of the google
chrome password holder and his thought was that google has too much
liability to not make it work well.  The guy did look the part of hacker
computer dude w/ a job at a funded startup, so he has some merit;-)

Passwords are a pain as everyone knows, hence why I went to keepass.  When
I was w/ JnJ they had different systems where the password req'ts
conflicted w/ each other.  One required special characters and one
prohibited special characters.  Not too mention length conflicts.  My
frowned upon one-size fits all password was out the door!  Drat!

Mark

On Wed, Nov 21, 2018 at 11:46 AM Chris Albertson <albertson.ch...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Gene,
>
> Maybe what you want to do is subscribe to a 3rd party password manager.
> This why storage of passwords does not depend on your browser or your local
> computer.   Some people think these outfits are there to steal your
> information, but they just don't understand encryption.  There are several
> I use Apple's "keychain" and it works across all my devices.   Google has a
> similar service that works with their Chrome browser and sync passwords
> across Linux, IOS, Andros, Windows and I assume Chromebooks too.   Then
> there is 1Password, they are universal and have been around for a while.
>  1Passworld, I think offers the best feature set will completely solve the
> problem if "what if every device I own burns up" but it costs $3 permonth
> The others are free do about the same thing.
>

_______________________________________________
Emc-users mailing list
Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users

Reply via email to