![]() Should you want to upgrade for greater overall security, the password manager typically gets included in Norton’s various security plans, available starting at $19.99 for the first year before increasing to $59.99 from the second year onward. Due to Norton’s zero-knowledge policy, if you forget the master password, you will essentially be locked out of all of your accounts. More concerning is the lack of options should you forget your master login. It does feature two-factor authentication (2FA), but some users perceive it as a very basic version. Norton uses 256-bit AES encryption and TLS secure connections to keep your information safe. It is also completely compatible with Chrome, Edge, Safari, Brave, Firefox and Internet Explorer. It functions well with Windows and Mac, and you can download its app on iOS and Android devices. This management is great for avoiding duplicates and developing strong passwords that are practically impossible to break. If a password is too old or unsafe, you can change it manually or allow the Auto Change function to update and save your information. Norton provides a “safety” dashboard, through which you can keep track of exactly how many passwords you have. Best of all, Norton’s manager is free to use as a stand-alone product. It keeps all of your logins together in a “vault,” all synced seamlessly across your devices. I’m a new BitWarden user and I have to say, I really like it.Norton Password Manager stands out as a competent password management system with a simple and attractive interface. I find it counterintuitive and frustrating however, that if I am logged in using the BitWarden application on the PC, when opening a browser and trying to login to say, Gmail, it does not recognize that I am logged into that vault in the app. I have to log in AGAIN, within the browser. There is no check to see I’m already authenticated in the official app.Įnpass, for example, allows this. I can open the app and work within it, etc, then if I visit a website that needs a login, it checks if I have the App open and authenticated. It’s quite simple, and facilitates integration between the app and the extension.įurther, I have to input my full master password each time I do this. I added a Yubikey in hopes that I could simply authenticate with bitwarden using my physical key. Avoiding having to enter that log tough password every time. These are legitimate issues I have for fully embracing your software at the moment. ![]() To the point that even though I bought premium, I am considering moving back to Enpass until these get addressed. I find them to be that much of a standard option/ability I can get from Enpass, Lastpass, Dashlane, or any others. I meant this to be respectful, and not a bash on the program. I legitimately like BitWarden and simply want to see it’s abilities mature.Ī great thing will be to change extensions working scheme or add new kind of extensions that could works this way: instead of opening the vault with the browser’s extension, the main desktop’s application (for example: Bitwarden’s Windows desktop’s application) take care of the vault management and opens a communication’s channel with the browser’s extension that just take care of things like forms filling and saving new entries. Keepass can do it with some plugins/extension. ![]() That’s 2 examples but I believe that 1Password may do it also. I think that it is far easier to care about memory’s safety on the fewer levels possible.
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