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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 9th, 2023

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  • Except you’re giving your passwords in an encrypted format. So if the company is trustworthy, it’s safe to let them store your passwords because it’s encrypted in such a way that even the company who own the password manager couldn’t access your passwords even if they wanted to.

    (Note the caveat of “IF the company is trustworthy”, which rules out Lastpass)

    Now I accept that there are legitimate arguments against storing passwords in the cloud via a password manager… so in that case, you may wish to use a local password manager (like Keepass) instead. But realistically, a typical person isn’t capable of memorising lots of unique, secure passwords… so the passwords need to be written down or stored in a password manager, just to avoid weak passwords or password reuse.


  • I’m a native English speaker so I can’t really contribute much to this post, but I remember watching a hidden camera prank show in the 90s, and the victim of the prank started yelling at the guy who pranked him. Unfortunately, I don’t know what language the show was in.

    The TV show translated the insults he used and put it in the subtitles… and one of the insults was “curse the pig who delivered you”.

    It probably sounded fine in his language but I remember thinking how oddly specific and personal to insult the midwife who helped your mother give birth to you lol.

    Maybe there’s someone here who can recognise what phrase and language was used here?


  • RIP_Apollo@feddit.chtoTechnology@lemmy.worldweather app
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    1 year ago

    I try to limit the amount of personal data being shared, so I really like the Hello Weather app for their privacy policy (although a lot of their features are behind a paywall).

    Other than that, I use Apple Weather since I figure Apple already has my data anyway ¯\_(ツ)_/¯



  • RIP_Apollo@feddit.chtoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    1 year ago

    Good idea, although this wouldn’t tell you if they truncated the password at 9 characters instead (or 10 or 11 characters etc).

    So you would have to try different attempts without making too many in one sitting that gets you locked out.

    If you tried your password without the last character, then I think that would tell you if ANY truncation is being used (but it won’t tell you whether it happened at the 8th, 9th, 10th etc character). But that seems like the best thing to try first just to rule it out.


  • Yes I’ve made a similar mistake in the past. On one screen I performed the auto-type and it was in the process of typing out the user/password combination, and while this was happening I clicked into a chat window on my other screen without thinking. The chat window immediately started having part of my password typing into it!

    Luckily I managed to click elsewhere in time to prevent ‘enter’ being typed at the end of auto-type.

    It’s just a reminder that you have to wait for auto-type to complete before you can do anything else.

    The UI isn’t obvious into which window it will autotype

    I found that if you click into the username field first and then switch directly to KeePass without opening/switching to any other applications in between, then when you click auto-type in KeePass, it works every time. This is because the browser window was the last used application before KeePass was selected. But yeah, it’s not an ideal user experience.


  • RIP_Apollo@feddit.chtoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    1 year ago

    I could be wrong because I haven’t used KeePass in a few years… but it’s my understanding that the auto-type feature doesn’t work on every website, depending on how they’re designed.

    So auto-type will work on websites where the username input field and password input field are on the same page, and where you can switch from the username field to the password field with a single tab key press.

    However I don’t think it will work on sites where the username needs to be submitted first before the password field is even visible. I think signing into a Google account is an example of this.

    At least that was my experience when I was using KeePass a few years ago. Please correct me if I’m wrong.