On 19/10/2017 at 22:24, Peter Hillier-Brook wrote: > I had similar problems and switched to Chromium, however I would never > trust *any* browser to store passwords
I don’t especially like or trust fully Firefox, but I wouldn’t trust Chromium more (yet my bank website too doesn’t work with firefox, that’s why I do everything from commandline with boobank (which does), yet once I used to use Chromium only for that). I’d especially like to notice that there are the packages *xul-ext-gnome-keyring* and *xul-ext-kwallet5* which make both Firefox and Thunderbird use respectively GNOME and KDE’s password managers. That’s way more secure imho, and especially with the package xul-ext-pwdhash. Waiting for the beautiful day where you’ll have only one passphrase to remember, update and type for both grub/libreboot, luks, PAM/login, password manager, and gpg-agent… Would that difficult to achieve? Would require intensive hack on packages grub, luks, shadow, Linux-PAM, Gnome-Keyring/KWallet and gnupg2 right? There are also the solution on allowing that unique passphrase per a usb token, a pgp card, or no passphrase at all (when you have memory problems and if you’re old and poor enough for example). Makes computers way more accessible…