PCWorld reports that Swiss researchers discovered significant vulnerabilities in popular password managers including Bitwarden, LastPass, and Dashlane due to outdated 1990s cryptographic technology.
In today's day and age, we all have accounts with dozens upon dozens of apps, services, and websites — meaning we're expected to keep track of dozens upon dozens of passwords. That is, unless you use ...
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I’ve used Bitwarden for years, and for a long time I felt pretty good about that decision. I wasn’t reusing passwords, I had strong, unique logins everywhere, and I wasn’t relying on my browser to ...
Stop using the same login credentials everywhere. The top password managers we've tested create unique, strong passwords for each of your online accounts and alert you to potential data leaks. I ...
Have you ever asked an AI for a password? When you do, it quickly generates one, telling you confidently that the output is strong. In reality, it's anything but, according to research shared ...
iOS 26 is packed with big and small changes, three of which have enabled me to make Apple’s Passwords app my one and only password manager. Three iOS 26 features have enabled me to use Apple Passwords ...
I've long been someone concerned about data security and privacy. I grew up in a time when your passwords were kept securely in your own organic memory if not jotted down on a page somewhere, so the ...
LastPass Review: Features, Pricing, Security, and Who It’s Best For Your email has been sent Choosing the right password manager is an important step toward ...