Why pay when LastPass is free?
or just print it and put if some where safeYes. Use something like 7-Zip to encrypt the file.
https://lastpass.com/support.php?cmd=showfaq&id=1206
It's far too easy for your files to get corrupted.
Is anyone else having issues with Lastpass this evening? Mine doesn't want to save passwords for new sites and the addon is popping up with sorry error while attempting to connect to server.
Fine here
Originally mobile support was for those who paid only, things have since changed
When did this change? This was my #1 reasoning for buying LastPass for the time I've been using it. Now I have the ability to use LastPass on my phone and my PC for free? That should save me some money after it expires in 5 months . In the time I've had LastPass, I've never used any of the features that they now class as premium.
Is anyone else having issues with Lastpass this evening? Mine doesn't want to save passwords for new sites and the addon is popping up with sorry error while attempting to connect to server.
Passwords stored by Chrome are stored in an SQLite file in your Windows profile. It's trivially easy to extract passwords from this file, I have a test application that will dump all of them out to a text file in about 5 seconds. IE and Firefox use slightly different approaches but again it's trivially easy to extract credentials from them. The same goes for other applications which store passwords like Putty, FileZilla, WinSCP and that kind of thing.During installing a dialogue has popped up saying that LastPass has the "following usernames and passwords stored insecurely on my system". There are dozens of websites and they all appear to be from Chrome's autofill and a few from IE. I was clueless until now, but I take it things like Autofill are not encrypted if LastPass can find them during an installation?
Passwords stored by Chrome are stored in an SQLite file in your Windows profile. It's trivially easy to extract passwords from this file, I have a test application that will dump all of them out to a text file in about 5 seconds. IE and Firefox use slightly different approaches but again it's trivially easy to extract credentials from them. The same goes for other applications which store passwords like Putty, FileZilla, WinSCP and that kind of thing.
The danger with Chrome is that it syncs between every browser that you sign-in to with your Google account. So if you go to a friend's house and borrow their laptop, sign in to Chrome with your account...now all your passwords and credit card details are stored on that laptop. It's an even bigger problem if you use the same Google account on your personal and work machines - potentially you could have business credentials on your personal device and personal credentials on your work device. It massively increases the attack surface.Oh dear, that's not very secure. But I suppose without physical access it's not very easy unless the OS is remotely accessed.
This nonsense again.I'm not a big fan of LastPass (it's an insecure piece of crap with multiple documented and exploited security flaws) but it's certainly better than just relying on Chrome alone.
The only 'nonsense' last time around was you defending LastPass without providing anything to back it up.This nonsense again.
You’re using the byte in kernel memory to index into the array—knowing which array element is accessed will tell you the contents of the byte in kernel memory, because it was used as the index, unless I misunderstood something.