Thanks all for the discussion. I do realize the privacy issue, storing the password names in a public repository, but as with Mark above, that's all I could figure out in the beginning.
Thanks for letting me know Alec that Gitlab and BitBucket have free private repos -- I'll migrate this week. And thank you Niels for the information on exporting / importing my gpg-key-pair. First time doing it -- I'll try not to royally screw up like the recent incident from Adobe's Product Security Team... On Sun, Oct 15, 2017 at 11:52 PM, Alec Clews <[email protected]> wrote: > On 16/10/17 15:35, Niels Kobschaetzki wrote: > >> >> The only problem I see might be privacy implications since other people >> can publicly see what for sites he is using, if he names his passwords >> accordingly. Maybe the user should invest in a github subscription to be >> able to create a private repository. >> >> > That was my concern -- I want to hide as much information as possible. > > You can get free private repos on Gitlab or BitBucket..... > > > > -- > > Alec Clews > Personal <[email protected]> Melbourne, Australia. > Jabber: [email protected] PGPKey ID: 0x9BBBFC7C > blog:http://alecthegeek.github.io/ > > _______________________________________________ > Password-Store mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.zx2c4.com/mailman/listinfo/password-store >
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