You probably can't trust your password manager if it's compromised (www.theregister.com)
from nuko147@lemmy.world to privacy@lemmy.ml on 18 Feb 03:48
https://lemmy.world/post/43269963

cross-posted from: infosec.pub/post/42164102

Researchers demo weaknesses affecting some of the most popular options Academics say they found a series of flaws affecting three popular password managers, all of which claim to protect user credentials in the event that their servers are compromised.…

#privacy

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url@feddit.fr on 18 Feb 04:04 next collapse

I always keep my keepass databases offline for good

nuko147@lemmy.world on 18 Feb 05:12 next collapse

I need to search this KeePass. I read it in other comments, but I have never heard of it before.

detonational_VuSE@lemmy.ml on 18 Feb 05:16 next collapse

It’s pretty good. I was using pass but keypassxc is easier. It also handles passkeys well. Here it is on Windows: portableapps.com/apps/…/keepassxc-portable. For Linux, just search for it in the package manager. Not sure about Mac.

Scrollone@feddit.it on 18 Feb 07:47 collapse

KeepassXC is also available for Mac.

FineCoatMummy@sh.itjust.works on 18 Feb 16:14 collapse

KeyPassXC is the way to go, IMO. It is wonderful. The password db is stored locally on your disk. It integrates nicely with firefox and probably other browsers too. Open source, no spyware, “just works”.

thermal_shock@lemmy.world on 18 Feb 08:08 next collapse

Bitwarden offers offline also. And self hosting I believe.

dessalines@lemmy.ml on 19 Feb 19:45 collapse

IMO Its fine to sync them with syncthing, as that’s end to end encrypted.

url@feddit.fr on 20 Feb 06:24 collapse

The vault is also encrypted so you are fine

FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website on 18 Feb 04:10 next collapse

I appreciate the air of publicity this story brings.

You probably can’t trust your password manager if it’s compromised

In other headlines: water is surprisingly wet.

nuko147@lemmy.world on 18 Feb 05:10 collapse

Yeah, the title is not that informative.

deadmyk@lemmy.world on 18 Feb 04:10 next collapse

In other news. Water is wet

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Feb 06:13 next collapse

Am I the only person here that never used one just because of this? They all sounded too sus to me.

muhyb@programming.dev on 18 Feb 06:42 next collapse

You can use local ones like KeePassXC.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 02:20 collapse

I have a degoogled phone with e/OS. I might try if they get a bit further into my use of their products and security. It sure would simplify methods.

muhyb@programming.dev on 19 Feb 04:09 collapse

I have a similar setup with LineageOS. I use KeePassXC on PC (KeePassDX on Android). I can sync them via Nextcloud with peace in mind because the database is already encrypted. Syncthing-fork also works if you want completely local.

I’m sure e/OS already has a password vault app in their list but if not KeePassXC is fully local out of the box and can be used with DX on Android.

It’s far secure than Firefox’s built-in password manager.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 18:56 collapse

I’ve only been using e/OS for a few months. Once I gain more confidence in the OS I can certainly try. I’m still super paranoid. It’s a lineage fork so there is update lag and possible security limitations in the OS itself. I’m just not sure yet.

ToTheGraveMyLove@sh.itjust.works on 18 Feb 06:57 next collapse

What did you do instead?

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 02:11 collapse

I have a few that I just have off the wall for a few things and I memorize those. Some I just use ssh keys. Others go off a pattern and I put hints in a file to figure it out. The account itself is not even put in this file, so I have to just know what the hints mean for both the account and what password pattern hints go with them. Usually, the user IDs are something I store in this file, because those get too tough for the aforementioned methods of determinism.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 18 Feb 07:49 collapse

Keeping them in your head? So, your passwords must be shit, lmao.

Zero threat prioritisation.

Tenderizer78@lemmy.ml on 18 Feb 09:34 next collapse

correct horse battery staple

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 18:53 collapse

So checkmustanglithium]

Horse@lemmygrad.ml on 18 Feb 09:50 next collapse

for the average person’s home pc, writing them down on a sticky note or notebook is sufficient
if someone unauthorized is physically in your house then you have bigger problems than them knowing your facebook password

ShortN0te@lemmy.ml on 18 Feb 22:02 collapse

And those handwritten notes are secure random passwords and never repeat?

Just too much work for the average person and too inconvenient to type.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 02:11 collapse

See explanation below.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 05:51 collapse

Shit passwords confirmed

hexagonwin@lemmy.today on 18 Feb 07:07 next collapse

KeePassXC ftw

TyrionBean@lemmy.ml on 20 Feb 05:52 collapse

I use Pass since a few years. It has a wonderful package for Emacs, and great iOS apps with face ID for ease of use, and the DB can sync to your own private git server behind tailscale. If you have a server, I definitely suggest looking into it. You can check it out at www.passwordstore.org