The sorting for one thing. The feel of use, something was amiss. I couldn't tell you exactly what. It felt like something was missing or not right.What is wrong with Strongbox? I think it is an excellent app.
The sorting for one thing. The feel of use, something was amiss. I couldn't tell you exactly what. It felt like something was missing or not right.What is wrong with Strongbox? I think it is an excellent app.
I've been using Enpass for years and would never host on a third party server. Remote hosting will always be broken so it's insane to ever do so.
So does this mean you are going back to 1PW?...Sorry, but I couldn't resist.Enpass needs a lot of polishing and the devs do not seem to care to fix it. Even worse, it doesn't seem to be picking up in popularity which means it will only slowly die. Its a little bit obscure.
I really wish for it to be the 1PW alternative but honestly its just not as good especially in the intuitive department.
The sorting for one thing. The feel of use, something was amiss. I couldn't tell you exactly what. It felt like something was missing or not right.
There's more than one angle to 'autofill'. First of all: Apple's implementation has drawbacks, such as Apple's own app asking about every input if autofill is enabled. In all things autofill Apple is restrictive and it's slow-moving.No extension is used for autofill so no extra security target vector caused by using a browser extension.
So does this mean you are going back to 1PW?...Sorry, but I couldn't resist.
Yesterday, you should have posted you were going back to 1PW. It would have been a good April Fools' joke.
I can’t comment on either 1Password or Bitwarden as I have never used either of them. However, I use Codebook that checks every password you enter for weaknesses. Additionally, for macOS and iOS it reviews passwords with HaveBeenPwned.I'm toying with the idea of giving 1Password another shot. If you recall I wasn't terribly upset over the changes that were announce that produced this thread. I did eventually move over to Bit Warden.
Its documented in another thread, but my twitter account was hacked, and I lost access to it. Long story short, I was using a compromised password and while the tools that bitwarden provided helped. I think the increased reporting/oversight of ensuring I don't reuse passwords, or using compromised passwords may be a reason for me to return.
To be fair, bit warden provides some of his reporting, but its not really built in for easy access, I'm sure of its as comprehensive as 1PW. I want to compare/contrast and decide which tool works best.
I'm not down on Bit Warden, I take full responsibility for using a bad password, but I've come to realize password managers have a glaring weakness. If you don't audit and manage your passwords regularly, then you never know how weak they may be. Having tools to easily manage and audit your usage are just as important
I'm toying with the idea of giving 1Password another shot. If you recall I wasn't terribly upset over the changes that were announce that produced this thread. I did eventually move over to Bit Warden.
Its documented in another thread, but my twitter account was hacked, and I lost access to it. Long story short, I was using a compromised password and while the tools that bitwarden provided helped. I think the increased reporting/oversight of ensuring I don't reuse passwords, or using compromised passwords may be a reason for me to return.
To be fair, bit warden provides some of his reporting, but its not really built in for easy access, I'm sure of its as comprehensive as 1PW. I want to compare/contrast and decide which tool works best.
I'm not down on Bit Warden, I take full responsibility for using a bad password, but I've come to realize password managers have a glaring weakness. If you don't audit and manage your passwords regularly, then you never know how weak they may be. Having tools to easily manage and audit your usage are just as important
Its documented in another thread, but my twitter account was hacked, and I lost access to it. Long story short, I was using a compromised password and while the tools that bitwarden provided helped. I think the increased reporting/oversight of ensuring I don't reuse passwords, or using compromised passwords may be a reason for me to return.
To be fair, bit warden provides some of his reporting, but its not really built in for easy access, I'm sure of its as comprehensive as 1PW. I want to compare/contrast and decide which tool works best.
I hadn't run an audit, and since filling in the passwords is now handled by the software, I was unaware (in a neglectful sort of way). It wasn't a huge issue, but one that I assumed that I had already cleaned up, but had notI don't follow what you're saying about password reuse. If you run an audit from the web vault and clean up any duplicat
Yes, but the app doesn't seem to have that reporting feature, and I rarely log into the website. I think you need to have those reporting tools at your tools at your fingertips.-Looks like Bitwarden indeed does not have a feature to check the strength of the password but the general rule is 4 random words
Actually you're wrong. The password is being reported as exposed via databreach.-I do not think you password was compromised.
I think monitoring should be part my overall workflow of managing passwords. Auto generated passwords of course mitigate this aspect, but we all know there are passwords that are a poor fit for that.If the continuous compromised password monitoring is important to you
That drives me nuts.I think monitoring should be part my overall workflow of managing passwords. Auto generated passwords of course mitigate this aspect, but we all know there are passwords that are a poor fit for that.
Actually you're wrong. The password is being reported as exposed via databreach.
That drives me nuts.
Me: Here's a password of many random words with symbols and numbers sprinkled in.
Them: Please limit passwords to 10 characters with only these characters.
I guess from a data breach ¯\_(ツ)_/¯How did your password get exposed?
Doesn't really matter - someone was able to use that password and steal my twitter account. Do I really care if its a hash or the actual password? No not really.Also every time data gets leaked they say its just the hashes, no passwords were exposed.
Doesn't really matter - someone was able to use that password and steal my twitter account. Do I really care if its a hash or the actual password? No not really.
Do I really care if its a hash or the actual password? No not really.
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If you want to protect yourself completely and not worry about hashes and the like, use double blind passwords. Problem solved.I care. I want to know how it works so I can protect myself. So far I have been comfortable about breaches since every time a breach happens they say its just hashes and they can't do anything with it.
It really is immaterial that its the hash or the PW - the point is that my password is compromised. I'm not sure why you are hung up on that. I think its great that you want to learn more about these things and improve your knowledge, don't get me wrong, but at the end of the day, it doesn't matter how people have the password - its compromised.I care.
I would read this post before going back:I'm toying with the idea of giving 1Password another shot. If you recall I wasn't terribly upset over the changes that were announce that produced this thread. I did eventually move over to Bit Warden.
Thanks, I'm reading through that thread right - seems like a new thread.I would read this post before going back
So far I've only used the windows version of 1password, and for the moment I'm not experiencing any lags.The new UI is an Electron mess. Regarding Electron, it uses way too much resources for sitting in the background. It is causing lags, sometimes it needs 20 seconds to show anything if you press the browser icon.
And the main reason, using Electron because yay cross platform isn't true because the Windows experience is also very bad
I've got to say I have not had any issues with resources being hogged any of my computers, Mac Studio, MacBook 14" M1, 2 Mac Mini's Intel and a PowerMac 2012. Shows minimum resources being used when I am not using the program. I have never had issues with either generating passwords or saving them. New passwords pop up in a blink of an eye and every password that is new gets saved, never had one not save.I would read this post before going back:
1Password has/ had a nice UI and better marketing. I can't see a reason to use it over any other password software.
It is inconsistent in its UI, in proposing passwords sometimes, sometimes not, sometimes saves passwords you generate, sometimes not.
The new UI is an Electron mess. Regarding Electron, it uses way too much resources for sitting in the background. It is causing lags, sometimes it needs 20 seconds to show anything if you press the browser icon.
And the main reason, using Electron because yay cross platform isn't true because the Windows experience is also very bad.
You don't have control over your passwords anymore because they are on their servers, so it is just a matter of time till something happens to them. They are the big player now so they will be also the biggest target for hackers. Just look at Lastpass.
They also have the exact same thread for Bitwarden. I bet if I look at the other Reddits for password managers, I’ll find more.I would read this post before going back:
1Password has/ had a nice UI and better marketing. I can't see a reason to use it over any other password software.
It is inconsistent in its UI, in proposing passwords sometimes, sometimes not, sometimes saves passwords you generate, sometimes not.
The new UI is an Electron mess. Regarding Electron, it uses way too much resources for sitting in the background. It is causing lags, sometimes it needs 20 seconds to show anything if you press the browser icon.
And the main reason, using Electron because yay cross platform isn't true because the Windows experience is also very bad.
You don't have control over your passwords anymore because they are on their servers, so it is just a matter of time till something happens to them. They are the big player now so they will be also the biggest target for hackers. Just look at Lastpass.