I found out that mozilla encrypts all passwords in the same way. This means, that you can encrypt it for another site ;)
Create your own website with form. set the correct fields... save your password... and change the site that owns the password... On Wed, 18 Aug 2004, Dan Kenigsberg wrote: > A certain site, whose name I would not mention, tries to be smarter than me and > disallows storing its password in my local, well-protected, mozilla password > manager. > > I saw that I can enter the password to the local database at > mozilla/default/xxxxx/yyyy.s but my problem is that the enries there are > encrypted. How can I encrypt my favourite password to fit there? > How can I decrypt an other, long-forgotten password, which is still stored > there? > > I guess I could look at the mozilla code to see how they do it, but I'd > appreciate if someone save me this by saying something like > echo 1qQTn4PUPa8BucF3FVpfA32/0f0b5GGF | openssl des3 -d -a -K AAAAAA -iv 0 > or point me to a fine manual. > > Thanks, > > -- Orr Dunkelman, [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Any human thing supposed to be complete, must for that reason infallibly be faulty" -- Herman Melville, Moby Dick. Spammers: http://vipe.technion.ac.il/~orrd/spam.html GPG fingerprint: C2D5 C6D6 9A24 9A95 C5B3 2023 6CAB 4A7C B73F D0AA (This key will never sign Emails, only other PGP keys.) ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]