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How to store passwords conveniently and correctly?
Given:
- a bunch of accounts on different resources, important and not very important,
- the stump is clear, passwords should be of high quality and different for different resources,
- the brain is weak - it can remember a couple of good passwords, no more,
- accessing accounts - from different devices, it means that a password manager on one of the devices or browsers is not an option,
- and an online password manager is not an option, because all the eggs are put in one basket of unknown quality
- logging in using Google, Facebook and others like it is also not very good, the owners resources it is absolutely not necessary to know more about me than I wrote on their resource. And Google and Facebook also do not need to have access to all my resources.
Who solves this problem?
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Critical services - local password manager or files on a small cryptodisk.
Non-critical multiple services - come up with an algorithm for creating a password, with the participation of a resource.
ssh - keys and throw out passwords.
KeepAssX for storing passwords for the entire web, it stores in an encrypted file, but you can encrypt it again on top, you will only need to remember one or two passwords to the manager.
It was rightly said about ssh that passwords are easy to destroy, only keys.
1Password (password manager). Plugins to it in browsers (Chrome, FF). The password database is synchronized via dropbox, including on an Android phone.
There was a similar question here recently. Notepad :) Paper. And a pen, with a cap tightly hooked to one of the rings of the notebook :)
And also storage in FF and Blur (former Abine).
can be stored in a notepad, which is packed in a password-protected archive. And carry with you on a flash drive
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