keeping something safe in the cloudinherently requires trusting a third party.
yeah, that says it all.
no access safe. access not safe.
cloud computing is good for non critical stuff and stuff you want ppl to see anyway. like your web page. even then, _javascript_ injection jacking your page,
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to
store a remote copy of the passwords (FTP server, scp, Dropbox,
whatever) while keeping the crypto and the master password on the end
devices?
Take a look at http://www.passwordstore.org/
Your GPG key encrypts all of the
On 6/15/2015 6:46 PM, Moti wrote:
I always had my doubts about keeping my passwords in the cloud.
Let's hope for LastPass users that their data is as secure as LastPass
claims it is.
No reason to think otherwise of course, but still. If i read correctly
between the lines, some people's
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to
store a remote copy of the passwords (FTP server, scp, Dropbox,
whatever) while keeping the crypto and the master password on the end
devices?
Seems to me that would limit the cloudy trust problem while still
addresssing the very
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to
store a remote copy of the passwords (FTP server, scp, Dropbox,
whatever) while keeping the crypto and the master password on the end
devices?
Seems to me that would limit the cloudy trust problem while still
addresssing the
John R. Levine wrote:
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to
store a remote copy of the passwords (FTP server, scp, Dropbox,
whatever) while keeping the crypto and the master password on the end
devices?
Nobody has mentioned STRIP yet, but it fits the bill:
From the department of ironic timing comes this recent posting on Hacker News:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9727297
On Jun 16, 2015, at 9:59 AM, d...@deadhat.com wrote:
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to
store a remote copy of the passwords (FTP server,
[Disclosure: I work for AgileBits, the makers of 1Password]
On 2015-06-16, at 10:53 AM, John R. Levine jo...@iecc.com wrote:
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to store a
remote copy of the passwords (FTP server, scp, Dropbox, whatever) while
keeping
the crypto
On 06/16/2015 05:53 PM, John R. Levine wrote:
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to
store a remote copy of the passwords (FTP server, scp, Dropbox,
whatever) while keeping the crypto and the master password on the end
devices?
KeePass 2 claims to have
On Tue, Jun 16, 2015 at 9:24 AM, Givon Zirkind givo...@gmx.com wrote:
keeping something safe in the cloud inherently requires trusting a third
party.
yeah, that says it all.
Right. And third parties cannot protect against the threat posed by
officers of the court/legal jurisdiction.
(Are
On 06/16/2015 06:20 PM, Tim wrote:
Are there any password managers that let the user specify where to
store a remote copy of the passwords (FTP server, scp, Dropbox,
whatever) while keeping the crypto and the master password on the end
devices?
Take a look at
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