• Rikj000
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    7 months ago

    2 words for you:
    Password Manager

    Get around to using one :P

    I only remember my password to my PW manager, which additionally is encrypted with a key file to increase security.

    The rest of my PWs are 128 character long random generated PWs, with capitals, numbers, special characters etc…

    • RubberDuck
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      127 months ago

      Yep. Several years ago I switched and it took a little getting used to. But now I would not want it any other way. The plugins in the browsers make it convenient and also a proper app on your mobile and you are set to go. Click on a password field and then you can click on the plugin to fill the fields.

    • AbsurdityAccelerator
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      67 months ago

      I wish all my passwords were 128 characters. Most sites won’t allow anything that complex. Because apperantly making the password hash field longer is hard /s

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      Where do you keep the key file and the PW managers DB? I feel like they would be too much side-by-side to really increase security in my case

      • Rikj000
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        47 months ago

        I won’t disclose where I store mine.

        But I’d recommend to:

        • Not backup your PW manager’s database + key file in the same location
          (That would decrease security, x1 data breach would allow them to easily brute force your PW DB since they’ll have the key)
        • Not go with a PW manager that does not allow you to choose a location where you desire to backup to (Seen plenty of mainstream PW managers getting data breached by now, so going with a cloud, which is not solely used for PW managers, has an advantage imo, since they tend to be less targeted by hackers)

        I’ve been happily using KeeWeb + Keepass2Android for years now:

      • Krafty Kactus
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        37 months ago

        You could use a USB drive that you only ever plug in to open the password manager. It’s not the most secure option but it’s a bit better than no key file at all.

        • @[email protected]
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          37 months ago

          Can’t use it with a phone though. To be honest, I think just having a password manager gives you protection against 99% of the attack surface. And if someone is really determined, I’m not sure the key file will be hard to obtain for them no matter what. But I was curious what setup others have

        • voxel
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          7 months ago

          or store the key in a tpm chip protected by password +biometric auth? that’s what kost OSs do for storing passkeys and encryption keys

    • @I_Has_A_Hat
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      17 months ago

      I have tried to use a password manager like 3 separate times now and can never seem to get the hang of it