If you hate having to remember passwords, you are not alone as most people are the same and many use very basic passwords because they cant remember anything too long. Obviously not very good from a security perspective.
Lastpass solves that problem and even better it does it for free.
On a PC, you sign up for an account and download their software. Whenever you visit a page where you have to login, as soon as you have logged in lastpass will ask if you want to remember it. You click yes. Whenever you return to that page, it will have filled out the login info for you. The only password you have to remember is the master password that you set on your lastpass account....thats it.
It can also auto generate a safe password for you......basically you can change the password for all your accounts to a long complicated password and not have to remember it because lastpass remembers it for you.
I am pretty good with passwords, but many sites are now demanding longer passwords that must have upper and lowercase letters along with other symbols that make things impossible to remember. Because of this, I am now a lastpass user.
It also has apps for mobile devices.
lastpass.com
Look Here -> |
Firefox and, I'm certain, others, also remember passwords for most sites. The only one's I never ask it to remember are those attached to my money.
I'm out of my mind, but feel free to leave a message...
irritant (24-01-19)
The thing with LastPass is that I don’t like my passwords being stored “in the cloud” (i.e. on somebody else’s computer) and can see that I’d need to pay for a subscription to do some of things I need to do. There’s also a bit of a history with that company offering things for free, then changing the rules so you have to pay for them.
I’m happily using the open source / free KeePass. It’s not perfect, but at least I’m in control of where my passwords are stored. It also lets me add custom fields - useful for router SNMP community strings and things that don’t strictly fit into a normal password manager.
Last edited by shred; 28-01-19 at 08:53 AM.
gordonwh40 (28-01-19),tristen (28-01-19)
I’m happily using the open source / free KeePass. It’s not perfect,[/QUOTE]
I would be concerned that it might talk back to the writer of the software with all your information
That's a valid concern and the argument over "open source vs proprietary" password management / security software is pretty much a religious debate.
With open source, anyone can contribute a change - including a potentially dodgy modification. But anyone can view the source to verify that it has no back doors and hasn't been compromised.
With a proprietary software product, you trust that the business creating it is keeping it secure and doing the right thing and that none of their developers does the wrong thing. Nobody outside that company can critique the source code and there are constant rumours of government authorities inserting back doors in commercial encryption systems.
There's more to it than this, but people can put forward very persuasive arguments for and against each approach.
i just use chrome pass portable on a usb stick
when i add a new site and pass i just back up the new file
to my usb and i can unplug and put it away till i need it.
I personally just dont like the cloud stuff.
tristen (28-01-19)
I generally find the cloud arguments amusing, particularly on a technology site. The entire internet is on a cloud, its called a server......including the website you are typing on and your password to boot.
Realistically, if you are scared of cloud computing, you shouldn't be on the internet.
In a nutshell, you could swipe all the passwords and all you are going to get is.......nothing.Originally Posted by Lastpass
Here's Microsoft's definition of the Cloud :
Its is a bit of a giggle that people say they wont use "the cloud" when they in fact do it every day....and type passwords in to it. Youtube, email, social media etc etc etc.The cloud is not a physical entity, but instead is a vast network of remote servers around the globe which are linked together and meant to operate as a single ecosystem. These servers are designed to either store and manage data, run applications or deliver content or a service such as streaming videos, web email, office productivity software or social media. Instead of accessing files and data from a local or personal computer, you are accessing them online from any Internet-capable device – the information will be available wherever you go and whenever you need it.
I can remember when web based email was the tin foil hat go to for "cloud" scares. "They can read your email", "The Government tracks all your movements", "The cat is pregnant and I am sure its a result of the Cloud". Here I am with 9 years worth of email in Gmail and no problems.
I can remember when I posted about and reviewed cloud services for files and photos such as Google Drive, Dropbox etc. Here is a photo I took as I used a secret cloud based video camera to take some snaps of you all :
In 20 odd years of going against what every alcoa foil bulk buyer has told me, I have had zero cloud problems If I had some of the hangups I read about, I wouldn't use the internet period. Actually when I think of it, the only true instances I have read of "cloud hacking" involve one simple process.......guessing easy passwords. Its no surprise at all that Apple's "iCloud" is the one that's constantly "hacked" ( a very loose term as password guessing is not hacking). Apple users, well lets just say that Apple has a higher than average incidence of having customers that are of below average intelligence and having ABC123 does usually get you caught out.
So the great irony of course is that Cloud hacking (again loose term) happens because people use easy to guess passwords. And a password manager like this stops it.
The difference being, if someone gained access to your ‘cloud’ password and account, they would have access to _all_ of your usernames and passwords for _all_ your accounts that you have stored. That is a somewhat legitimate concern for having all ones passwords stored online.
There are two things in IT that you should never outsource: one is security and the other is backups. When you migrate your data to "the cloud", you are outsourcing both.
Cloud providers always have an "all care taken, but no responsibility" clause in the contract that you sign when you entrust your data to them. They undertake to do their best to keep your data safe, but if they lose it, it's always a case of "how sad, too bad". There have been many documented cases of people suddenly losing all access to their cloud hosted data - sometimes through something as simple as the cloud provider going broke. It has happened many times in the past and it will continue to happen in the future as the cloud market matures. I really, really don't fancy having to go around resetting every one of my online passwords.
Skepticist (30-01-19),tristen (31-01-19),Uncle Fester (01-02-19)
I've been using Steganos Locknote for a long time to store such sensitive data in the form of a simple text file securely. The encryption is AES 256 but the security is further enhanced by only keeping the encrypted file on local storage, never in the 'cloud'. If required, I can simply take a copy of the file with me on a USB stick or SD card and open it on any PC (Win or Linux with Wine). Must look into whether it can be run on Android sometime.
Because this is a technology site you should expect that there people here who don't just believe everything they read on the Internet and are critical of certain claims about security and do their own research in order to use the Internet wisely.
Some things are safer kept offline.
Many things are safer using individual passwords(that are recorded offline).
...and trying to memorise as much as possible is a good way to delay dementia in later life
It all comes down to what you need to do. Obviously just for keeping photos and music, clouds are perfectly fine and can be useful.
You don't keep your house 24/7 unlocked ... or do you?
An single online/app password solution for all your privacy needs is like keeping your house key under the door mat.
Last edited by Uncle Fester; 01-02-19 at 10:10 AM.
Update: A deletion of features that work well and ain't broke but are deemed outdated in order to add things that are up to date and broken.
Compatibility: A word soon to be deleted from our dictionaries as it is outdated.
Humans: Entities that are not only outdated but broken... AI-self-learning-update-error...terminate...terminate...
enf (05-03-19),Skepticist (01-02-19),tristen (01-02-19)
if you look back through all the posts, tristen, there were quite a few attempts at humour, none of which were relevant. S, what's your point.
I keep all of my critical stuff somewhere on one of my computers, good luck finding it though, among the many thousands of files stored there. And, yes, I do know which file it is in, and you'll not find anything in it that is of use to you.
I'm out of my mind, but feel free to leave a message...
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