How do you store your passwords?
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Hey! I use lastpass, I just didn't have linkedin in there yet! haha
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yeah I too use Lastpass.
I really dislike that they are now owned by a company who has proven they won't stand by their word though (LogMeIn).
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I use both keypass and lastpass.
Keypass is for mission critical like Admin password to workstations. Basically anything offline.
Lastpass is for online stuffs.. like Mangolassi, Amazon, Youtube, -
Stickie notes.
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@anonymous said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Stickie notes.
What Size?
Just the standard ones. They scale well, just add another to the wall when you fill one up.
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@scottalanmiller and when you run out of walls, then you just move to another room. Migration is a pain.....
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@anonymous LMFAO!!
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Room to Room Migration isn't too bad. House to House seems painful.
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PasswordSafe and Keepass are great.
There are version for all system, very useful if you use Android or IOS using Dropbox or Drive.
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Dashlane
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I was going to write that I use Keepass rather than Lastpass because I don't like the idea of some dodgy American firm storing the keys to my entire life on their servers, but then I remembered that I store my Keepass database on OneDrive so....
I still suspect Keepass is more secure than Lastpass but I can't really say why. I suppose someone would have to hack into both my OneDrive account AND my Keepass database, whereas maybe it's easier to hack into Lastpass? I also haven't used iOS apps for accessing Keepass since that requires giving my Keepass database credentials to a 3rd party app (as Keepass haven't made their own app) and I'm not confident about doing that.
I dunno. It sometimes scares me how much personal info I have in Keepass.
Anyway, I use Keepass for personal and work, and love it.
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I use LastPass currently, and if their new owners shit on it, I will switch to Dashlane.
KeePass is rather useless to me because of the shared setup I use for client information.I recommend KeePass to individuals for home use. It is less useful in iOS. I recommend LastPass to heavy mobile users.
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I remember mine...always been a bit wary of using an application to store them...then, if someone gets into that, they have everything surely..?
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@NattNatt said:
I remember mine...always been a bit wary of using an application to store them...then, if someone gets into that, they have everything surely..?
I have hundreds of unique passwords for all the various systems and sites and services I use. There is zero chance that I can remember all of those passwords.
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Do you all let your browser store your passwords? Any good reason not to?
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@JaredBusch said:
@NattNatt said:
I remember mine...always been a bit wary of using an application to store them...then, if someone gets into that, they have everything surely..?
I have hundreds of unique passwords for all the various systems and sites and services I use. There is zero chance that I can remember all of those passwords.
Yeah, I'm lucky in that I only have about 20 or so passwords to remember
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I set mine as my screen saver so when I leave my computer logged in under the administrator account for longer than 30 minutes (every day) it forces me to login again--which is annoying and everyone here says is pointless (I agree). That way I never forget my password.
/heavy sarcasm
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@Carnival-Boy said:
Do you all let your browser store your passwords? Any good reason not to?
Nope, any good reason - well, Lastpass can import them, that kinda tells me that an infection can export them - so.. yeah, no thanks.
of course, I suppose it might be possible for an infection to export an open vault on Lastpass as well, but that would have to be specifically programmed.