![]() I religiously kept my password manager locked, assuming a securely locked password manager would thwart any malicious activity and the most someone could steal is a bunch of random data since I trusted my password manager to scrub any sensitive entries from memory once I locked it. The Washington Post recently published an article based on our study of various password managers to spread awareness that not all password managers are created equal. ![]() ![]() With so much sensitive data entrusted into a single application, it’s important to understand what one’s exposure is in terms of credential loss on a compromised machine, be it malware, post exploitation scenarios (looking at you, Adobe Flash), or if you forget to lock your workstation when you walk away for a few minutes. Myself, I have over 200 password entries. We love password managers they are great for many reasons. Down the RE’ing rabbit hole to exploit a fatal flaw in an otherwise great password manager (1Password 4).
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