A certain site, whose name I would not mention, tries to be smarter than me and
disallows storing its password in my local, well-protected, mozilla password
manager.
I saw that I can enter the password to the local database at
mozilla/default/x/.s but my problem is that the enries there
I found out that mozilla encrypts all passwords in the same way.
This means, that you can encrypt it for another site ;)
Create your own website with form.
set the correct fields...
save your password...
and change the site that owns the password...
On Wed, 18 Aug 2004, Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
This lovely hack solves one of the problems.
And with slight modification - also the other one: all I should do is copy the
ciphertext of the forgotten password to the ad-hoc 127.0.0.1 site, and then, see
what plaintext is received there.
Very simple. Far from elegant. Cool.
On Wed, Aug 18,
Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
This lovely hack solves one of the problems.
And with slight modification - also the other one: all I should do is copy the
ciphertext of the forgotten password to the ad-hoc 127.0.0.1 site, and then, see
what plaintext is received there.
Very simple. Far from elegant. Cool.
On Wed, Aug 18, 2004 at 04:48:24PM +0300, Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
A certain site, whose name I would not mention, tries to be smarter
than me and disallows storing its password in my local, well-protected,
mozilla password manager.
I don't know which site you refer to, but Yahoo is one such