Can someone redpill me on LastPass? They've been around for a long time now and never had a leak where actual passwords were compromised. KeePass is fine but kind of a pain to constantly update a Dropbox file and find extensions that work.
Is it really a big deal if I use this to store bullshit like my passwords to online stores and Dominos?
>>61254446
>They've been around for a long time now and never had a leak where actual passwords were compromised.
That's not true.
Anyway, just write down passwords on a piece of notepaper if you want. It's safer.
>>61254446
Our company uses it and I think it's great atleast for organizations. Started using it myself and it has a lot of cool features. I use 2FA on all important accounts anyway so a leak could not damage me drastically even if someone got all my passwords.
I have not explored any alternatives though.
> a pain to constantly update a Dropbox file
Wait, do you upload it manually or what? Install Dropbox client.
> and find extensions that work
Works on my machine.
The only possibly useful benefit of highly centralised password storage like LastPass is "secure" password sharing.
Use KeePass.
>>61254446
I use it for various passwords that aren't very sensitive to me, eg: forum accounts, logins for news subscriptions, etc. Nice to have strong passwords but still available on all my machines. I use a strong memorized password and an OTP token.
I use password store (gpg) for things that matter, eg: bank accounts and so on
Works well for me. $12 a year is nothing considering the utility I get from it. Secure passwords are worth the effort, it's something you don't appreciate until it bites you.