Y6OSe9y2W5T8JvKnlee&AuV8t5GD$gnH%eA%m*5gQkSn1cTheY*LibcLoVy22*ZGa@0t*0FR2@!i0ttWgKIxhDndEFLsw3vV5XD
lulz NSA was able to monitor communication of the whole country of France for a month. I doubt any password we use is safe.
Safe In Cloud is the highest rated password manager there is on the Google Play store.so many of these coming out. i just discovered 2 in this thread.
LastPass is the best I've encountered, but it's used @ the browser level. There is another that is used @ the OS level.... keepass I think. That could be interpreted differently.... :biggrin:
I agree with the op.
There are some iT people that are totally anal when it comes to password security.
I have one financial site that requires a password change weekly.
Now THAT is just anal.
Safe In Cloud is the highest rated password manager there is on the Google Play store.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.safeincloud
It has a standalone Windows app, and you can use Firefox and Chrome browser extensions if you want.
And unlike LastPass, it's a one time $2 fee and doesn't require any subscription.
Well, that's better than writing your passwords down on a piece of paper and stuffing it in your wallet. It's also better than using "correct horse battery staple" and words in the dictionary that are subject to attack. It's also convenient if you have one of those accounts that require you to change your password every few weeks.That sounds really smart, not only putting the password on the cloud but on google cloud. May as well just send an email to the NSA directly and skip the middle man. :awe:
I feel the pain. However what many forget is that most pass's get taken because they hack the servers. No matter what you change your info too, if they get into the servers then they can get your stuff...don't depend on them to encrypt all your data but even that is hackable most of the time.
My gmail accounts kept getting taken but it was due to them getting into Googles servers. Millions of people all over the world get their data stolen from all sorts of servers everday....remember when Valve had to issue emails for everyone to change their passwords as a safeguard cause their servers were hacked?
If those passwords are properly hashed and slated, really shouldn't be an issue.
Safe In Cloud is the highest rated password manager there is on the Google Play store.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.safeincloud
It has a standalone Windows app, and you can use Firefox and Chrome browser extensions if you want.
And unlike LastPass, it's a one time $2 fee and doesn't require any subscription.
Eeew....They still haven't adopted Holo yet. That Gingerbread UI design needs to die a horrible death.Lastpass is free, the premium requires $12 a year. It's got things like phone support etc. The android app is pretty dated though, it still works.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.lastpass.lpandroidMobile version of the award-winning LastPass password manager. Fast, easy and simple; securely syncs your passwords across all your browsers and devices.
Key Features:
- Built-in browser that will automatically fill your login information for each of your saved LastPass sites.
- Automatically fill forms on all sites.
- Secure Password Generator.
- Add, update, and delete Secure Notes and Sites.
- Add images and audio recordings to Secure Notes as attachments. This requires us to request camera and audio permissions.
* 14-day free trial, requires $1/month LastPass Premium subscription afterwards.
Note: Due to the way Android implements input methods, if you would like to use LastPass for Android's input method to fill into apps, you must not move the app to the SD card. It will be disabled upon each reboot if you do so.
Eeew....They still haven't adopted Holo yet. That Gingerbread UI design needs to die a horrible death.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.lastpass.lpandroid
I don't see a "*" anywhere else in their description.
That tells me that the whole app itself is a subscription, disguised as a free app.
Is there any php/mysql web based systems out there? I coded my own a while back as I could not find any, but I'm wondering if I should consider polishing it up and releasing it to public.
Fun.http://arstechnica.com/security/201...eling-the-next-frontier-of-password-cracking/
passwords are quickly becoming damn near useless
....huh.For his part, Chrysanthou said the biggest challenge is the work required to update and hone his phrase lists and rule sets to ensure that they can be processed quickly on his computer, which uses an Intel Dual Xeon CPU, a single AMD Radeon 5870 video card, and a traditional hard disk.
Hope so.Well, that's mostly an MD5 problem, but worth noting nonetheless.
The plain text password dumps are the scary ones. Now you have a big batch of real passwords to analyze, and find the patterns. Even if you can "only" crack 30% of the password hashes obtained from a break-in....that's not a secure system.Everyone should read this article. Correct battery horse staple will go down quite quickly under these methods. Sure, it will take a long time to brute force, but these attacks don't use brute force. Dictionaries with substitution rules, password lists, etc all cut down the time it takes dramatically.
To the poster who uses the 4-letter algorithm, I do something similar but it won't really help either. Basically, the article states that if the algorithm is simple enough for you to remember, then it exists as a rule in some password cracking algorithm somewhere, and a computer can run it faster than you can.
With security/recovery questions being the stupidly easy way to get passwords nowadays, I am basically resigned to the notion that my passwords exist just to keep out accidental logins and people trying 5 times to guess my password via birthday and name combinations.
What is your place of birth?Another trend I hate is secret questions. those actually reduce security because someone can just find out the answer through social engineering. I would not considered my mother's maiden name or the school I went to to be a closely guarded secret. I usually put BS in there because they've always been used only if you forget your password (which is where the security issue is) but I see a lot of places that will randomly ask these questions after you put in your password. That forces you to put something you can remember, but that someone wont be able to find out in case someone tries to use the lost password feature. Oddly enough it seems to be banks that do this more than anything.
This is why secure and accurate biometric authentication is needed. Very hard to hack (provided the templates are secure), and is based on user friendly 1 factor authentication.
Note that I am not talking about the fiasco that is the fingerprint scanner on the iphone 5s, which was apparently hacked in just a few days.
With a few keystrokes, I can make IE reveal your auto-completed password. The same thing works for Chrome, but it's not really necessary since Chrome allows you to view them anyway.You should not allow Chrome to store your passwords:
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/08/chrome-password-manager/
complex passwords lead to password files or hand written password
Don't believe me? Hack my Google Docs or my Outlook.