[ale] Of password managers and family...

DJ-Pfulio djpfulio at jdpfu.com
Sat Oct 21 05:48:12 EDT 2017


KeePassX is what most of my family uses, including my 80+ yr old Mother (when
she was alive).  It changed her life (her quote, not mine).  But Mom stopped
using Windows after being totally hacked and she got backup religion too.  Of
course, I setup everything so most of it was automatic and I maintained her
system from 3 states away.

I've made the same offer to my extended family - I'll maintain their computer,
provided they run Linux.  I don't touch commercial OSes.

Linux is the lowest "barrier to entry" solution, IMHO.



On 10/20/2017 04:16 PM, Kyle Brieden wrote:
> I completely and totally appreciate your stance on this, Joey.  My family don't
> fall into our category, though :P
> 
> I can't say I trust anything that's opaque or outright blackbox myself, but
> *something* is better than *nothing*, which is what they have right now. 
> There's a reason companies like LastPass thrive.  They are trusted to do the
> hard things for people who can not or do not want to.  I guess, overall, what
> I'm asking for, is this:  "Which company do y'all feel is most trustworthy?" 
> Additionally, "Which tool is easiest to use so that someone who would actively
> avoid learning 'those computery things' would be willing to utilize this?"
> 
> ---
> Very respectfully,
> Kyle Brieden
> 
> On 20-10-2017 15:55, Joey Kelly wrote:
>> On Friday 20 October 2017 15:30:56 Kyle Brieden wrote:
>>> Howdy all,
>>>
>>> I've been using a KeePass vault for password management for a little
>>> while now.  I use my NextCloud server (SUPER awesome, do recommend) for
>>> syncing the vault between computers and mobile devices.  I use KeePassXC
>>> on Windows, Mac, and Linux, and I use different apps on my Android phone
>>> and iPad respectively.  This is all well and good for *me*, because I
>>> like the open source, I own all the hardware, I'm doing this all on my
>>> own kind of feel, but this isn't sustainable for anyone more than
>>> myself.  I have been bitten in the ass before by my vault getting out of
>>> sync between two devices or being open on multiple devices at a time.
>>
>> Someone needs to LART me because this is an AOL "me too!" reply.
>>
>> I do not trust any foggy service to hold my passwords. I am a hardcore geek
>> and enjoy bash, so I decided to spin up yet another half-finished project to
>> vault my passwords a year or so ago, using Perl and AES. My script asks me for
>> the master password, then lets me view or change any particular entry. I have
>> to manually copy and paste the passwords.
>>
>> I don't trust others, but I trust me, and ain't no way I'm going to leak data,
>> even encrypted data, to the web.
>>
>> --Joey
>>
>>>
>>> My family (fiancee, sister, brother-in-law, mother, and father) need
>>> protection.  They NEED to stop reusing passwords and set up a password
>>> manager.  Does anyone have any opinions on low barrier to entry, low
>>> friction password managers for the non-technical in our lives?  I've
>>> investigated LastPass thus far, and the price seems worth it to me.
>>> LastPass seems trustworthy, too, with how open they are about their
>>> technology stack.  I have looked at some others, such as Padlock, too,
>>> which seems like a good open source alternative.
>>>
>>> Thoughts?  Opinions?  Feelings?  Success and/or catastrophic failure
>>> anecdotes?
>>>
>>> Thanks!
>>>
>>> ---
>>> Very respectfully,
>>> Kyle Brieden
> 
> 
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