On 08/06/12 2:01 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
the Android client lets me pull up passwords on my phone when I'm on one of the
systems that doesn't have a native 1Password client, or when I am on the road.
Does the Android client know how to automagically login to 11
different Android Apps
Original Message -
> From: "Lyndon Nerenberg"
> The only way to ensure your personal passwords are never compromised
> is to kill yourself after destroying all physical copies of those
> passwords. While ultimately secure, you won't be able to do your daily
> online banking.
No, but on
On Fri, Jun 8, 2012 at 2:00 PM, Tyler Haske wrote:
> KeePass, KeyPassDroid and Dropbox.
>
> I'm sure it will just get simpler as time goes on.
I second this! I deploy KeePass via MS GPO. No formal training on the
application for the end-users but we do one-on-one with end users when
we can. I hav
On 2012-06-08, at 2:07 PM, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
> I'm not trying to be dismissive. Those are excellent stopgap
> measures. They're not a solution.
There is no "solution." Security is about risk management, nothing more.
The only way to ensure your personal passwords are never compromised i
On Fri, Jun 08, 2012 at 05:00:14PM -0400, Tyler Haske wrote:
> KeePass, KeyPassDroid and Dropbox.
Yes, of course, I'll just upload all my passwords to a place totally
under the control of someone (well, actually, _two_ other ones) else,
and then pray that there never turns out to be a nasty attack
On 06/08/2012 02:01 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
On 2012-06-08, at 1:41 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
I run a website. If it can change it on mine, I'd like to understand
how it manages to do that.
I log in to your website, change my password, and the software picks up that
I've changed the passwo
On 2012-06-08, at 1:41 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
> I run a website. If it can change it on mine, I'd like to understand
> how it manages to do that.
I log in to your website, change my password, and the software picks up that
I've changed the password and updates the safe accordingly. The soft
KeePass, KeyPassDroid and Dropbox.
I'm sure it will just get simpler as time goes on.
My mom uses a key database just fine.
On Jun 8, 2012 4:49 PM, "Andrew Sullivan" wrote:
>
> On Fri, Jun 08, 2012 at 01:30:42PM -0700, Michael Thomas wrote:
> > PS: when security is hard, people simply don't do i
On Fri, Jun 08, 2012 at 01:30:42PM -0700, Michael Thomas wrote:
> PS: when security is hard, people simply don't do it.
I think this is exactly right.
The idea that we are going to train everyone on earth to keep eleventy
billion distinct passwords in their heads -- or in a "password safe"
that
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