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How To Manage Your Passwords With Macpass Chrome
Safely share your passwords and data with others; Ensure the privacy of your information thanks to the zero-knowledge architecture; Read more: How do password managers work? How to Manage Passwords With Passwarden. Using a dedicated app to manage passwords comes with its pros and cons. However, anyone who’s concerned about the security of. Feb 25, 2018 I tried the advice given to other users with the same question, but when I do manage to find my way to credential manager and manage passwords, it demands ID verification with a username and password, which I can't even remember having set up in the first place. I could really use some help with this issue, before I end up in the nut house!
How often do you find yourself struggling to come up with new login credentials, only to forget them afterward? Managing passwords for every account, site, and service can certainly get frustrating at times. Even more so, if you consider that the number of internet devices and online accounts in use is constantly growing.
It is essential to make sure each of your passwords is secure. This, in turn, requires that you understand how to manage passwords properly, why it’s so important, and what makes a password strong. In this Passwarden® blog post, we'll discuss exactly that!
Why Managing Strong Passwords is Important
Hackers can use a vast array of techniques and tools to gain access to your sensitive information. However, most often a security breach occurs through one of two attack vectors: either via a brute-force attack or by exploiting the victim’s negligence of security measures. In both scenarios, the attacker’s job is all the easier if the victim uses simple, short, and common passwords.
The dangers of weak passwords
What exactly is wrong with weak passwords? We’re going to explore this in the following paragraphs, but for now, here’s a bit of password management trivia for you. One of the most commonly used passwords is '123456789', which is by accident also one of the most commonly hacked ones. Think about it.
Of course, we genuinely believe that your password is stronger than that. But if you think about some of the first passwords that come to your mind, upon closer inspection you may find them wanting in terms of strength. Our passwords tend to include at least some of our personalized details - names, birthdays, schools and graduation years, kid and pet names, sports team and favorite band names, etc.
Unfortunately (but not unexpectedly), many of these details are by no means unique enough. Hackers have long been utilizing curated lists of words and phrases that are commonly used in passwords. This allows them to organize global attacks, targeting large groups of people at once. And the most likely first victims of such attacks are users with weak or common passwords.
Passwords and brute-force attacks
One of the most common types of attacks aimed at breaching into user accounts and stealing personal data is aptly named a brute-force attack. In it, a hacker uses a program that attempts to systematically enter every possible combination in an attempt to basically “guess” your password by trial and error. It might feel like this would take forever, but with a powerful enough computer, and with a weak password, a brute-force attack can crack it in minutes or hours.
Now, it must be noted that no password is totally uncrackable. The only difference between a weak and a strong password is that the latter takes more time to crack. However, this is a vital difference! While a weak password will take a couple of hours to crack, a long, complex, and unique password will take hundreds of years, rendering any attack futile.
3 Rules for Managing Strong Passwords
1. Variety of characters
Creating a strong password is not as difficult as one might think. The first step is to use different types of characters in your password (numbers, special symbols, upper and lowercase letters), which makes it significantly more reliable. By adding even a single character of a different type, you increase the list of potential combinations that an attacker has to try. The more complex the combination of characters - the better.
2. Password length
A healthy mix of characters makes a password more reliable, but making it even a few characters longer increases its security manifold. How long should a password be? The general consensus is - at least 10+ digits long if it combines various types of characters, or at 15+ otherwise. Adding just 3 extra characters to a weak password can increase the time it takes to crack it from hours to centuries.
3. Password uniqueness
Ah, the painful topic of reusing passwords. Most of us know it’s a bad habit, and yet we often opt to do reuse a password or two nonetheless. Just to recap, why should you use unique passwords? Because otherwise if a security breach reveals a password on one of your accounts, it automatically jeopardizes all the others where you use the same password. And coincidentally, the first thing a hacker does when they get their hands on your password is to try it on every other account and email that belongs to you.
![How to manage your passwords with macpass chrome How to manage your passwords with macpass chrome](https://macpass.github.io/img/screenshot_search.png)
Using a Password Manager for Strong Passwords
To sum up the above, a strong password should be long enough, contain a variety of types of characters, and be unique. Here’s a random example of a strong password, generated in Passwarden: F*j9upoFj)7f2agkvz. Now imagine you have something similar for a password per each of your accounts. This raises a valid question: how are you supposed to remember all those? Well, you aren’t - a password manager should do it for you!
A cloud-based password manager like Passwarden is a helpful tool that allows you to:
- Securely store your passwords, along with other sensitive information (logins, ID card, Driver’s License, SSN, credit cards and banking information, etc.)
- Conveniently manage and easily retrieve the stored data when needed (password autofill option included)
- Add extra layers of security with Two-Factor Authentication and Duress Mode
- Generate strong passwords and instantly save them in protected vaults
- Safely share your passwords and data with others
- Ensure the privacy of your information thanks to the zero-knowledge architecture
Read more:How do password managers work?
How to Manage Passwords With Passwarden
Using a dedicated app to manage passwords comes with its pros and cons. However, anyone who’s concerned about the security of their passwords and data would do well to use a password manager. As opposed to other, less reliable means, e.g. writing passwords down on sticky notes or digital sheets.
How to start using Passwarden
Our password manager is really easy to take up! You can download and use it or free right now using the free subscription. You can also check out Passwarden paid subscriptions for more advanced options.
Once you sign in with a new or existing KeepSolid ID, you will be prompted to create a Master Password. This is a very important step! Master Password is your key to Passwarden, which means two things:
- You want to make sure that it’s well-protected - strong enough to withstand a brute-force attack, and reinforced with two-factor authentication
- You don’t want to lose it - without it, not even Passwarden’s employees can access your data (see how to recover your Master Password)
With your newly created Master Password, you’ll be able to access your Passwarden account and start managing your passwords and sensitive information in Vaults. A Vault is a single, separate storage place. You can create any number of Vaults for different purposes (e.g. a personal Vault for your own data and a shared Vault for your family account passwords).
How to manage saved passwords
What if you wanted to use Passwarden to manage passwords that you already have stored in other apps, for example in a browser? In this case, you could utilize the Data Migration feature. It allows you to import passwords from different apps directly to Passwarden. This is a very convenient option since otherwise, you’d have to manually transfer what could easily be thousands of passwords!
How to manage passwords on Mac, iPhone, Chrome, Safari, and other devices
With Passwarden, you can manage passwords on all popular platforms, including macOS, iOS, Windows, Android, browsers, and using the web app. Moreover, you can use Passwarden on any number of devices simultaneously. And with the cloud-based data synchronization, any passwords that you save on one of your devices will instantly become available on all the others where you’re signed in to your Passwarden account.
To make this easier, using a Mac password manager will keep them safe while letting you log into your numerous online accounts quickly and easily.
Password managers are becoming increasingly popular, so much so that Apple now supports dozens of the most secure of these apps through APIs. Apple also has a pretty strong password manager built-into Safari, the macOS web browser. Let’s look at some of the top password keepers for Mac, starting with the macOS native application that is part of Safari.
Best password managers for Mac
1. Native Safari password manager
Apple introduced the native macOS password manager for Safari some time ago. Other web browsers have similar functions, so you may have seen this around already. So for those who use Safari as a default browser, you should have seen this password manager appear whenever you've made an account for anything online, or when you have tried to log into an account.
Although perhaps not as robust as third-party applications, lacking many of the features that encourage people to download password manager apps. The upside is the Safari password manager is as secure as they come. Since it’s built within Safari, it’s as integrated as possible with Apple software security, making it an ideal choice for anyone concerned about password security.
To use the Safari password manager, whenever you are creating a new account Safari will realize this, prompt you to create a strong password, and then store this within the Keychain. Whenever you go back to the same site, it will remember the web address and fill the password in automatically and securely when you are logging in.
Providing your Mac is logged into and connected to iCloud, every password Safari remembers is automatically synced and stored in the iCloud Keychain. This means if you login to a website on a macOS device and want to login to the same account on an iOS device, it will remember the password and log you in securely.
Changing passwords isn't a problem either. Simply type in a new one and Safari will ask if you want to save and store it using iCloud Keychain. You can also access every password stores within Safari settings.
2. LastPass
Created by LogMeIn, LastPass offers a range of free and and paid plans and is without a doubt one of the most popular for Mac users. It can be used on iOS and macOS devices, and is perfectly compatible with other operating systems, so wherever you are, you can keep dozens of passwords secure within this app.
Some people say the user experience isn't as good as they would like. But it gets the job done, and there are even plans for Teams and Businesses.
3. 1Password
It is equally popular, with macOS and iOS versions so that you can manage passwords easily on any and every devices you might own. For Mac users in particular, this feels as close as possible to a native application within the Apple ecosystem. Perhaps because 1Password started out on macOS, making it more intuitive for that operating system. Pricing is cheap enough and you can even sync it with other cloud-based apps, such as Dropbox and iCloud.
For Mac users who want to make sure they have a Mac that is operating at peak performance - while keeping your passwords safe (either within Safari or a third-party app), CleanMyMac X is worth downloading. It is an invaluable Mac performance improvement app that gets your computer running as good as new again, while also helping to keep it secure from a whole load of viruses.
4. Dashlane
How To Manage Your Passwords With Macpass Phone
Dashlane is another popular one and does everything you would expect of a password manager app (storing passwords and autofill). However, it also does something that others currently don't offer, known as Password Changer:
“Password Changer™ is a free feature in Dashlane. It does the heavy-lifting of replacing old passwords with strong new ones, and secures them in Dashlane where they’re remembered and typed for you.”
Pricing is competitive and it works on macOS and iOS devices. It has an easy-to-navigate user experience too.
How to protect your passwords on Mac?
Password security is a problematic issue in the Mac world. The newly discovered Ventir Trojan virus is reported to record keyboard strokes which is a covert way to steal your passwords.
In the event of a cyber attack succeeding, someone could potentially have access to every online account you have, including your bank, any online payment accounts, social networks and emails. No one wants that to happen.
So, staying secure has never been more important.
One way to do that is with CleanMyMac X. Here is how you can keep passwords secure:
- Download CleanMyMac X (you can do that free, here)
- Click on Privacy
- Within this, you can use it to erase any saved passwords on Mac you don't need anymore (and clear out any cookies and caches that could be causing security vulnerabilities).
Check your Mac for keyloggers
Something else worth doing is to click on Malware Removal in the same app: this way, if there are any Mac keystroke/logger viruses that are recording passwords secretly — such as the Ventir Trojan (and there are dozens of others) — you can safely remove them.
- Open CleanMyMac X
- Choose 'Malware removal' in the sidebar.
- Click 'Scan' and then 'Remove'.
If CleanMyMac finds signs of Mac keystroke/logger viruses, change your online passwords and reset your browsers after removing the virus.