

The service is both secure and extremely easy to use-a combination that’s been lacking in most previous password-management software. Then, to log into a password-protected site, you just click on the site’s icon on the PasswordBox menu. Once you’ve entered your existing online passwords into PasswordBox or created safer new ones, all you have to remember is one master password.
#PASSWORDBOX REPLACEMENT PC#
This week I’ve been testing a new consumer-oriented service, PasswordBox, that can make up strong passwords and then remember them for you across the Web, whether you’re using Safari, Chrome, or Firefox, and whether you’re surfing from your PC or your mobile device. Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Windows Phone, Blackberry

Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, Android, Blackberry Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, Androd, Blackberry Windows Phone, WebOS, Symbian
#PASSWORDBOX REPLACEMENT PASSWORD#
The Xperience Key to the Top Password Managers And they’re finally coming up with solutions that can help average consumers put less of their precious brainpower toward remembering passwords. So what’s the good news? It’s that designers, engineers, and entrepreneurs have been thinking hard about the problem. I’m talking about jumbles that sound like FedEx tracking numbers-for example, “lxgJSN4F6BvAK6HTUfMo” or “PASzYFweX8sbACYgB8hN,” just to use two 20-character strings that I generated randomly using Wolfram Alpha. But a password that lengthy is effectively impossible to keep in your head, let alone type in every time you login at a website. To be truly secure, a password should be so long and so random that it couldn’t be deciphered even if the encrypted version stored by your bank or your e-mail provider fell into the hands of a hacker. Making up a secure yet memorable password used to be a matter of picking a random word or two and throwing in a couple of numbers-say, “fid0bark5.” But today, hackers have so much computing power at their disposal that almost any password simple enough for a human to memorize can be decrypted in seconds. The bad news is that we’re losing the race to keep these passwords safe from hacker attacks.

Leave it to tech entrepreneurs to turn bad news into good news.įor most of us, our passwords are the keys to our entire digital lives.
