Called iCloud Keychain.
Can you bring an example, please?It doesnt work (edit: Not available) in all countries...![]()
I didn't choose 1Password because I found that the yearly subscription of $50-60 (in addition to the app prices) was too much.
I didn't choose 1Password because I found that the yearly subscription of $50-60 (in addition to the app prices) was too much.
Wrong.
The subscription to 1Password.com is $2.99 per month (35.88/year) for 1 person and includes the app and all future upgrades for Windows, Mac, iOS and Android for FREE, so it is definitely not "in addition to the app prices". And if you want it for a family, it is $4.99 per month (59.88/year) for up to 5 people.
But they have indeed tried to hide their perpetual license store, so that people go for the subscription (which earns them more money and a guaranteed income over time). They have however said that they are committed to always serving people who need perpetual licenses too.
Here is the perpetual store: https://agilebits.com/store
The perpetual single-user license for Mac/Windows (you get individual licenses for each OS) costs about the same as 2 years of subscription for one person. And add iOS or Android into that too, which means that being a perpetual license holder equals about 2.5-3 years of subscription.
Beware: The perpetual Windows version is currently at v4. They'll release v6 later. It is currently only available as v6 for subscription users. The perpetual Mac version however is v6 already.
The perpetual license is meant for 1 user at a time, but they don't verify that. So a family could take advantage of a single perpetual license.
This is why I still don't use a password manager. I can't justify spending money on something that should be built into an OS in the first place. Of course keychain hasn't cut it for me, and so this doesn't seem to be an option, so I've just been risking it.
But $50 a year? Maybe $10. Why are they so damned expensive?
... being a perpetual license holder equals about 2.5-3 years of subscription.
This is great to know!! I wasn't aware of this. BUT does that mean if I went ahead and purchased a perpetual license somehow they may find a way to make it obsolete by adding a feature only accessible to subscription members? And with my luck it will go into effect before the 2.5-3 year payoff period...
That's a serious question. Forgive me for not understand nuances of such subscription plans. I would absolutely be willing to buy a perpetual plan but don't fall for this subscription stuff. Add up everything you subscribe to an your a slave to your subscriptions.
5.61 hundred billion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion centuries
Thanks for info on GRC haystack, @SteveJobzniak - it's an interesting insight into just how fast passwords can be cracked nowadays ... my 15 character master password would take 1.49 million centuries
What is the difference of the browser's "save my password" feature?
Never used it, but heard great things about it. The only thing that worries me is not being able to remember my password say I need to log in on a public computer of something of the sort.
Security: Keychain passwords are accessible as soon as your user account is open. So anyone using your Mac can use your saved passwords (even if they can't see them). 1Password is locked separately from your user account and can be unlocked/locked at will.
The fun part was realizing that "uhqKU,QH2d#1.32" takes 1.49 million centuries, and "There is 1 spoon!!!" takes 1.21 hundred trillion centuries. The latter works because no password cracking dictionaries contain that phrase, so they'd still have to bruteforce it too. It looks like less entropy than the first, but it's actually far better since it is longer and still has to be bruteforced.
I know which one I would prefer memorizing and typing repeatedly on my Mac and iPhone!
So that is why I suggest passphrases with mixed case, punctuation/special and numbers. And make it something nobody can guess about you (and not a famous phrase either!), but still memorable enough that you will remember it if you wake up after 3 months in a coma.