![]() ![]() I’ll assume we are not talking about 4-5 passwords, but for the more common situation of dozens of logins, even hundreds for some. a *good* password manager (not *any* p.m.) for password storing and re-entering. I’ll skip the irrelevant ramblings about “evil progress” and stick to the point: pen & paper vs. I expect it to be in the range of comparable services such as it’s not “my progress”, it’s humanity’s. The developers have yet to announce how the free and paid plans will look like. It is a beta program on the other hand, and that shows in some regards like the inability to install the program on one system, and missing functionality such as one-time passwords, more authentication options and so on. RememBear does a lot of things right it supports creating a backup of the master password, supports strong encryption, and has been audited already for security issues. It appears that you need to install the Chrome extension for that. If you only use the desktop application, you don't get autofill functionality. I suppose that option will also be provided for other browsers once the extensions are released for these. You can import logins from Chrome, 1Password or LastPass as well when you load the main interface. The desktop application offers to scan the PC for passwords to add those to its database. The developers suggest you install the desktop app on either operating system to create the backup kit it can be used to regain access to the data if you forget the master password. You are prompted to create an account and a backup kit on first run on Windows or Mac, but not on mobile. It did work fine on a machine running the latest Windows 10 Insider Build however. It is beta and all, but not really a promising start nevertheless. On a side note, I tried installing the program on a Windows 10 Pro 64-bit system and could not do so because of some dependency of a VC Runtime file. ![]() The issues that were found were fixed before the public release of the first beta version of RememBear. The company that did the review, Cure53, found no critical vulnerabilities. The creators paid for a security review of the service on top of that. The service uses end to end encryption (256-bit) to prevent anyone but the user from accessing the data. It remembers and auto fills in user information (including credit card details), and syncs the data across all user devices. The service supports the core feature set that the majority of online password management solutions support. ![]() The team plans to release a free, limited version, and a paid version in the coming months. RememBear is free to use right now in the beta. The developers released a Chrome extension on top of that, and promise to release Firefox, Safari and Edge extensions soon as well. ![]() It is available for Windows and Mac desktop systems, and iOS and Android mobile devices. RememBear is available as a beta version right now. While I use KeePass, a desktop password manager, others may prefer a solution that provides them with online access to their passwords, integrates better in browsers by default, or syncs passwords by default between all devices. Computer users can select between native browser solutions, browser extensions, desktop applications, online services, and whether they want syncing, additional features, and pay for the password manager. Password managers and services are a dime a dozen nowadays. ![]()
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