Actually Chrome probably does better since it won't automatically push your passwords to the cloud unless you sync. Mine as well just store all your passwords in Chrome. I don't know, I don't like the idea of a digital store of all of my most critical information put behind a password that doesn't even pop-up on your computer. LastPass can be compromised every single way that my memorized passwords can, in addition to being compromisable on any computer you use it on, and the LastPass services stores all of your passwords offsite, all of them, adding in another huge vector for attack against your entire catalog- in a way that my memory can never be attacked (without say, interrogation/force). I started this thread asking if there was a better solution that memorizing 5-10 passwords and using some variable of a throwaway for the majority of everything else, and I'm still not convinced that my method isn't the best outside of just hard memorizing a unique password for every site.įact is: my memorized passwords can only be compromised where they are stored on servers (or through a keylogger). Memorizing a few unique passwords for mission critical services while using generic throwaways for low-priority sites is more secure than LastPass can ever be.
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