DivineChaos100 [none/use name] to technology • 3 years agoStop blaming people for choosing bad passwords – it's time websites did more to helpexternal-linkmessage-square52 fedilinkarrow-up140
arrow-up140external-linkStop blaming people for choosing bad passwords – it's time websites did more to helpDivineChaos100 [none/use name] to technology • 3 years agomessage-square52 Commentsfedilink
minus-squarekristina [she/her]hexbear12·3 years agoid go a step further and it should be a browser that does it link
minus-squaressjmarx [he/him]hexbear17·3 years agoFirefox has some kind of password manager that generates long random strings so the only one you have to remember is the one to the browser itself. I've never used it, but I think about it every time I'm on a website trying password, password1, password123, PassWord123, etc link
minus-squarekristina [she/her]hexbear8·3 years agoyeah but should probably be a default action also stuff like google auth is very nice except the fact that its google. means a website doesnt have to worry about security as much link
minus-squarespectre [he/him]hexbear2·3 years agoThis is also a feature in Safairi, but better yet is using a password manager like Bitwarden link
minus-squaredeterminism2 [he/him]hexbear8·3 years agoEspecially when I have to go into their settings every odd quarter to turn off whatever it is that keeps trying to memorize and autofill my password entries after the latest update. link
minus-squareculpritus [any]hexbear3·3 years agoFF Sync encrypts everything at rest on your devices with your passphrase, and that never leaves your devices unencrypted. https://hacks.mozilla.org/2018/11/firefox-sync-privacy/ seems a lot better than most cloud pwd managers in that way link
minus-squareQuillcrestFalconer [he/him]hexbear2·3 years agoI guess they could all be stored encrypted and then when you want to use autofill you need to use the master password. That would make it much safer link
minus-squaremarxisthayaca [he/him,they/them]hexbear5·3 years agoApple keychain and Safari on mobile create long string passwords link
id go a step further and it should be a browser that does it
Firefox has some kind of password manager that generates long random strings so the only one you have to remember is the one to the browser itself.
I've never used it, but I think about it every time I'm on a website trying password, password1, password123, PassWord123, etc
yeah but should probably be a default action
also stuff like google auth is very nice except the fact that its google. means a website doesnt have to worry about security as much
This is also a feature in Safairi, but better yet is using a password manager like Bitwarden
deleted by creator
Especially when I have to go into their settings every odd quarter to turn off whatever it is that keeps trying to memorize and autofill my password entries after the latest update.
yeah.
FF Sync encrypts everything at rest on your devices with your passphrase, and that never leaves your devices unencrypted.
https://hacks.mozilla.org/2018/11/firefox-sync-privacy/
seems a lot better than most cloud pwd managers in that way
I guess they could all be stored encrypted and then when you want to use autofill you need to use the master password. That would make it much safer
Apple keychain and Safari on mobile create long string passwords