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Password vault programs for Linux, Windows, Smartphones
- Subject: Password vault programs for Linux, Windows, Smartphones
- From: gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org (Jerry Feldman)
- Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:19:54 -0500
- In-reply-to: <5efa64ba1003100914q631241a3p905b904e20ff32fc-JsoAwUIsXosN+BqQ9rBEUg@public.gmane.org>
- References: <4B97B3E5.2020607@blu.org> <5efa64ba1003100906v4cbb410bk4c6cf6ff6578e61@mail.gmail.com> <5efa64ba1003100914q631241a3p905b904e20ff32fc@mail.gmail.com>
Thanks, since I already replied directly to you I won't belabor the rest of you all. As I mentioned, there are many password storage programs with a large number that have good ratings. The three I listed all have Android, Windows, and Linux apps. I think you make a very good point about using a different random password for everything on the web. As I mentioned, I don't exactly understand "Simply copying the password database (with the encryption key shortened to accommodate the clunky BlackBerry keypad)". Are you talking about a "pass phrase" or an actual encryption key. Additionally, I understand that the encryption methods being used are AES and TwoFish. As I originally stated, I probably would retain the database on the internal microSD that can be shared across platform. Also, do you use a single master password or a key file. On 03/10/2010 12:14 PM, Brendan Kidwell wrote: > (Sorry for the repeat Jerry. Once again I forgot to Reply-To-All the > first time I sent it!) > > Let me share my experience in the last year or two... > > I decided to go all-out and generate a different, random password for > EVERYTHING. Trust no holders of your credentials not to leak them. > > In the past I've used Password Gorilla, and then I migrated to ... > something else whose name I don't remember. I tried putting them in a > notebook in an encrypted filesystem < > http://www.glump.net/howto/passwords_zim >. These solutions all worked > out quite well, except that there was no way to sync to my Blackberry. > > I then tried KeePass 2.x (.NET/Mono WinForms app) followed by KeePass > 1.x/KeePassX. > > The 2.x series of KeePass included a Java mobile app that is ported to > many platforms including BlackBerry. I did NOT use the BlackBerry > desktop manager app -- it's junk. Simply copying the password database > (with the encryption key shortened to accommodate the clunky > BlackBerry keypad) to the BlackBerry's storage via USB worked out > perfectly well. I do not sync bidirectionally; I push down to > BlackBerry once a month or so. (If I wanted to, I could put new > entries from the BlackBerry in a "todo" category and manually enter > them upstream before pushing.) > > In my experience, all desktop versions of KeePass and all BlackBerry > ports work fine with the system clipboard. Jerry I'm not sure why you > seem to have had a problem with it. > > Two problems I had with 2.x: > > 1) It's a WinForms app and it doesn't work so well under Mono and X -- > especially if you do not use GNOME or KDE environments. I was using > the ion3 window manager for a while, and while everything else worked, > KeePass 2.x had a tendency to not draw text in certain controls. > That's a bit of a downer. > > 2) KeePass 2.x for BlackBerry uses more memory and processing time > than KeePass 1.x for Blackberry. > > I found out that KeePass 1.x -- kinda like Apache 1.x for such a long > time -- will be supported for "the foreseeable future". And KeePassX, > the X port of KeePass 1.x, works perfectly on any desktop I try it on. > The BlackBerry port works fine. > > The KeePass 2.x file format has more features than the 1.x file > format, but you'll find that pretty much all the CRITICAL features you > need are implemented in the old format. I don't really need > custom-named fields -- I dump things like "What's your cat's name? > [random letters] What was your wife's sister's childhood best friend's > name? [random letters]" in the Comment field. > > If every account and every "security" question has a different random > password, it is absolutely essential that you 1) use a good encryption > key, 2) don't forget the key (you won't if you use it every day) and > 3) copy the database off-site and keep it up-to-date. > > Actually what I do is this: > > 1) Primary copy is stored at SDF (public access Unix) and I remotely > mount via SFTP (sshfs) whenever I want to view and edit the database. > 2) I copy the primary file to a read-only cache in > ~/etc/keys/cached/brendan.kdb (on every desktop) once in a while, in > case I need to access the database while I'm not online. > 3) I copy the primary file to my BlackBerry once in a while and change > the key to something more manageable for the BlackBerry keypad. > > Brendan Kidwell > > > On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 9:59 AM, Jerry Feldman <gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org > <mailto:gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org>> wrote: > > My requirements are: > 1. Cross platform Android, Windows, and Linux. > 2. Be able to syncronize the data bases. Storing the data base on the > microSD would work since it is available when plugging in the Android. > 3. In creating an entry I need to be able to cut and paste (If I > recall > I was not able to do this with either of the password managers I tried > on Blackberry. > > -- Jerry Feldman<gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org> Boston Linux and Unix PGP key id: 537C5846 PGP Key fingerprint: 3D1B 8377 A3C0 A5F2 ECBB CA3B 4607 4319 537C 5846
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- Password vault programs for Linux, Windows, Smartphones
- From: gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org (Jerry Feldman)
- Password vault programs for Linux, Windows, Smartphones
- From: brendan-j2ZBMMpYpO5eoWH0uzbU5w at public.gmane.org (Brendan Kidwell)
- Password vault programs for Linux, Windows, Smartphones
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