![]() One of my favorite plugins is KeePassHttp, which exposes password entries securely over HTTP. I mentioned that KeePass has great plugin support. KeePass lets me generate long, complex passwords easily so I never (ever) reuse passwords anywhere. I keep my KeePass databases in a cloud storage account protected with Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA). I choose KeePass 2 because it has good encryption (AES-256), great multi-platform support, lots of plugins, good security features like automatic workspace lock, is open-source and free. I keep all my login information secure in a KeePass 2 database. It has the features I need, simple as that. The Browserįor me Google Chrome works best. And not only that but at the same time that i want to operate as myself. But we are not end users are we…? For me all this caching is very inconvenient when I need to be someone other than my own identities, which is all the time. All in an effort to make it easy for an end user to get to his stuff quickly. As you all know browsers try to make life easy for their users, and therefore they cache a lot of information, including logins, cookies and AuthN tokens (these are cookies too). The tool I use most to interact with these services is the web browser. That means many, many different user accounts to keep track of. I spend my time working with public cloud services for a large number of organizations. ![]()
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