
The blog post says it is possible to bypass server-side PBKDF2. Honestly, it's made me question the validity of any password manager when it comes to storing anything other than passwords. You need a password that is considered strong decades from now. You need a password that will be strong enough to stand the rest of your life, or beyond. enough data to tell the story of your life complete with the most private identifying data.Īrmed with the data stored in a vault today, 10 years from now is likely still enough to establish credit, validate security questions, etc.

But some of the data stored will NEVER become irrelevant (or entirely irrelevant) for a lifetime of a person. Granted, as time passes, much of that data becomes irrelevant. If a sever gets hacked like LP, and files stolen like LP, the criminals have decades to whittle away with ever better technology. A "strong" password today is an ever weaker one every passing day. We'll always be marked by an official flair, and will always love both 1Password and you. You'll see some friendly people from the 1Password team ready to help you - keep an eye out for /u/1PasswordCS-Blake, /u/agben, u/Zatara214, and more of us! Read recent coverage on us and see the 1Password love.

Bits will be marked by an official flair. We'd love to hear from you here, on Twitter, or via email.1Password is designed to be easy, secure, and seamless.More on, and why you need a password manager.

Available for Mac, iOS, Windows, and Android, syncing seamlessly between all of them. It's simple, secure, and seamless, and it's one place to store your passwords, secure notes, and documents-all protected by the Master Password only you know. Welcome to r/1Password! This sub is a great place to discuss 1Password, password managers, and internet privacy/security in general.ġPassword is the award-winning password manager designed to make your life easier.
