9/15/2023 0 Comments 1password 7 for android cannot![]() ![]() I will also be contacting the regulator and ombusdman with written complaints too. My complaint is already in plus a more extensive written complaint as they failed to take up my offer allowing them to act swiftly and reasonably. The law was clear enough but they over-egged it and blocked a transfer for discriminatory reasons, and broke the specific partof the law they wereusing which stated information obtained under this law may not be used or another purpose, and they also broke regulator guidelines on customer service. It was because of this I made a stand with a UK money transfeer company. Where lots of organsiations or individuals default to a bad (and sometimes technically unlawful) implementation of a law and where they all play follow the leader so market forces disappear and you end up with a universally bad default at what point do you say “no”? Schemes which accomodate this bad law area form of acquiescence. ![]() You sould be worried about such a feature, i have no plan visiting us now, but i’d like one day to visit new york and some other famous city, but i don’t want to give up my passwords or have the phone cloned just to visit some city. Other countries doesn’t have that “official speed test” because they doesn’t need that in first place. The same apply to the eff, we don’t have it in Italy, and i’m happy with it, because we don’t need that in first place, there are less “digital abuses” and we don’t need eff equivalent here.Īnother example is that we have “official speedtest” and if that say that you have slow connection isp has to pay you! we have it because isp cheat on real speed, they say “up to 20mb” while the real speed might be 5mb. not because it doesn’t work or the way it is implemented, but because it is necessary in first place.Īll the people should stop finding ways to “cheat the system” and instead tell to people “this is plain wrong and you shoudln’t ask my passwords”.įor example, when gov censor websites for no reason all the infosec people say “i don’t care, i’ll just use tor, vpn, proxy, whatever” while they should say “you shouldn’t censor that website in first place”.Ĭountries with “free internet” are a limited resource, stop ignoring the problem. J8:09 is a great feature, and I’m happy to see it implemented. Variants of microdots could carry an unknown password and be concealable. The disadvantage is this will not surivive an APT attack if they have the infrastructure to crack passwords from known plain texts. All you need to remember is the book, page, word number, word length. On balance I woudl go with Bruce’s scheme even if it’s just to reduce the head cluter from yet-another-application-clogging-up-my-computer.Īnother option is to fill a travelling device with benign material and have a large document such as a book containing a passphrase. In extremis a key phrase could be used to both divulge the genuine password and also alert trusted people in your home country. It removes a whole lot of factors to a safe backend. As long as the key is not accessible via a “password” it would not be a lie. Technically, “password” has a limited definition. This is a great feature, and I’m happy to see it implemented. It’s more complicated to implement, though. I previously described a system that doesn’t require you to lie. In the US, lying to a federal office is a felony. When the scary border police ask you “do you have any other passwords?” or “have you enabled travel mode,” you can’t tell them the truth. ![]() The only flaw-and this is minor-is that the system requires you to lie. If the scary border police demand that you unlock your 1Password vault, those passwords/keys are not there for the border police to find. You can turn Travel Mode on and off for your team members, so you can ensure that company information stays safe at all times. If you’re a team administrator, you have total control over which secrets your employees can travel with. In 1Password Teams, Travel Mode is even cooler. So even if you’re asked to unlock 1Password by someone at the border, there’s no way for them to tell that Travel Mode is even enabled. There are no traces left for anyone to find. That includes every item and all your encryption keys. Your vaults aren’t just hidden they’re completely removed from your devices as long as Travel Mode is on. The 1Password password manager has just introduced “travel mode,” which allows you to delete your stored passwords when you’re in other countries or crossing borders: ![]()
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