Password Tools for Remembering

I’ve been a reader of Slashdot.org for quite a while.  At least for 9 or 10 years if I recall correctly.  Every now and then a reader asks the Slashdot community a question regarding best practices and practical methods for remembering an arbitrary large number of passwords the average person needs to keep track of.  The question is usually worded differently, but the need is usually the same — the passwords need to be kept safe, but portable, uncoupling them from specific software or platform as much as possible, and secure enough that if the file/software/computer were stolen the passwords (and the things the passwords unlock) would still be safe.

Recently, a Slashdot submission in this context was:

“Lately I’ve been rethinking my personal security practices. Should my laptop be stolen, having Firefox ‘fill in’ passwords automatically for me when I go to my bank’s site seems sub-optimal. Keeping passwords for all the varied sites on the computer in a plain-text file seems unwise as well. Keeping them in my brain is a prescription for disaster, as my brain is increasingly leaky. A paper notepad likewise has its disadvantages. I have looked at a number of password managers, password ‘vaults’ and so on. The number of tools out there is a bit overwhelming. Magic Password Generator add-in for Firefox seems competent, but it’s tied to Firefox, and I have other places and applications where I want passwords. And I might be accessing my sites from other computers that don’t have it installed. The ideal tool in my mind should be something that is independent of any application, browser, or computer; something that is easily carried, but which if lost poses no risk of compromise. What does the Slashdot crowd like in password tools?”

The response is filled with witty replies and interesting views and suggestions as per usual.  Nothing really new usually surfaces when someone asks this on Slashdot, since it seems the capacity to have passwords for online banking, social networking, work computers, home computers, blogs and whatever else grows and evolves faster than the ability to keep track of them all efficiently (and securely).

A while back, I wrote about my solution to this problem after having tried to solve it different ways.  In that post, I detailed my evolution from a Java application on a USB keychain to a website called Clipperz.

Well, I have been using Clipperz for almost 2 years now.  It is immensely useful and efficient.  I have had ZERO problems.  Yes, none, nada. NO problems whatsoever.  How many things can you say that about?

Clipperz does seem to be growing in popularity, since the last time I remembered the question asked on Slashdot, hardly anyone recommended Clipperz.  This time, a few people mentioned Clipperz on Slashdot.  However, its been 2 years and Clipperz still has the “beta” status.  Granted, Google Mail was in beta for years until they became “production”, but still…


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