Wait, you guys don't write your passwords on notepads you leave everywhere?
In all seriousness, KeePass for the win. My only issue is there isn't a
good way to automatically migrate new passwords from phone to desktop.
I was thinking of writing my own little password manager using some GoLang,
Po
Key folks here recommended KeepassXC after looking at migrating away from
Lastpass back to something more local/trusted, and it's been pretty good
for me under linux. I miss the cloud integration of passwords on my phone
too, but deal with this otherways. Not always ideal, but I really don't
trust
I'm surprised no one has mentioned KeePass yet. KeePassXC is open source,
stores data locally, is secure, and supports some other things like OTP token
generation. You can then sync the database with Nextcloud, dropbox, etc.
On February 4, 2021 4:14:33 PM MST, Matthew Crews via PLUG-discuss
wr
On 2/4/21 2:59 PM, Snyder, Alexander J via PLUG-discuss wrote:
> Do you have time to talk about our lord and savior LastPass?
>
> Also, please don't store passwords in your browser.
I'm more of a BitWarden person myself, but any password manager is
better than storing it in your browser.
-Matt
--
Then I must be an unusual case. I have 307 distinct passwords in my head and
because of some of the characters used, they don’t translate to Braille at all.
However, what makes my scheme so friendly for me, yet extremely difficult to
guess is how I create them. Also, in the last 10 years, I have
HaveIBeenPwned is only good for official data breaches which some are just
out of your control like the Exactis breach, its just a good way to get an
idea of what could possibly be out there.
If you are really worried about your password security, change your
passwords, try out LastPass or Dashlan
Do you have time to talk about our lord and savior LastPass?
Also, please don't store passwords in your browser.
Thanks,
Alexander.
Sent from my Samsung S20+ 5G
On Thu, Feb 4, 2021, 14:58 sean via PLUG-discuss <
plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
> Google checks your email against a large
Google checks your email against a large set of compromised credentials.
You can check yourself at resources like haveibeenpwned.com, which has 16
records of your email in its datasets.
157 sounds like a lot and makes me question Google's data quality, but in
any case this is what they are doing.
H
I wish I could
On Thu, Feb 4, 2021 at 4:41 PM Harold Hartley via PLUG-discuss
wrote:
>
> Don’t use chrome.
>
> On Thu, Feb 4, 2021, at 14:27, Michael via PLUG-discuss wrote:
> > Whenever I try to save a password in chrome a window pops up saying I
> > have 157 compromised passwords. Then, after I
Don’t use chrome.
On Thu, Feb 4, 2021, at 14:27, Michael via PLUG-discuss wrote:
> Whenever I try to save a password in chrome a window pops up saying I
> have 157 compromised passwords. Then, after I click the inspect button
> I am informed I have no saved passwords. How do I get that notice to
>
Whenever I try to save a password in chrome a window pops up saying I
have 157 compromised passwords. Then, after I click the inspect button
I am informed I have no saved passwords. How do I get that notice to
stop appearing and passwords to be saved again? Oh, I forgot to say
thay passwords are no
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