I like KneePass if for no other reason then it is open source and
everybody can see the code and verify that the encryption is what it
is suppose to be.
m
At 04:27 PM 1/15/2011, you wrote:
Aside from a situations where your machine gets rooted or you have a
keylogger (which means you are screwed no matter what) LastPass is about as
safe as you can be for login and credit card storage.
If you are interested in the details and a full security analysis, Steve
Gibson gets into the gory details of their crypto and code in this episode
of Security Now:
http://twit.tv/sn256
-----------
Brian
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On Sat, Jan 15, 2011 at 6:44 PM, Stan Zaske <[email protected]> wrote:
> I use LastPass myself and hope that I'm secure. I use all three main
> browsers but don't allow them to save passwords.
>
>
>
> On Sat, 15 Jan 2011 09:19:26 -0600, Anthony Q. Martin <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> Firefox will remember CC info!
>>
>> On 1/15/2011 9:56 AM, Thane Sherrington wrote:
>>
>>> I had a client come in and proclaim Trend Titanium as the best AV suite
>>> out there because it "prevents credit card information from being entered
>>> into email, im, or websites." Now it seems to me that this is
pretty easy
>>> to avoid - just don't type into any of these things. But he thinks that
>>> credit card info is stored in cookies and/or temporary internet files. I
>>> did some checking, and I don't see that happening in my temp
files, but I'm
>>> wondering if this is really a concern, or just marketing by Trend.
>>>
>>> T
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
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