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#1Password

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What I would expect from #1Password is independence.

Independence from external commercial interests and extracurricular activity.

I would expect opposition to governmental and corporate influence. Visible and clear messaging about safeguarding. Statements opposing any use of backdoors, crypto compromises or other attacks on the users' privacy.

Take a page out of @Mer__edith 's playbook - don't stay in jursidictions that want to break the seal.

Be loud. Be clear. Be secure.

4/4 @blake

"You received this email because you subscribed to emails from 1Password about resources and security advice."

what the crap, #1Password ?

a) why is my trusted password manager cooperating with a speculative company built on selling stimulants?
b) how is this "Resources and security advice"?

@1password (and @zak might be interested too)
In blog.1password.com/making-mask it was mentioned how easy it is to integrate because of #JMAP, and somewhere in feature requests I saw preference for creating integrations using that rather than other APIs.
@stalwartlabs is one of few servers having JMAP, what are the chances of having an integration between the two?
#stalwart #1password #privacy #Email

1Password’s Masked Email uses JMAP, an open API standard for modern mail clients. Learn why we chose it, and how it works in our integration.
1Password Blog · How and why we built Masked Email with JMAP – an open API standard | 1Password1Password’s Masked Email uses JMAP, an open API standard for modern mail clients. Learn why we chose it, and how it works in our integration.

I can recommend #StrongBox password manager for people using #Apple ecosystem. They're doing password manager right. Here are some of my personal reasons for liking this software a lot:

- Flexible sharing: Any amount of containers, in any mix (local or cloud). Includes built-in StrongBox Sync, but also has direct integrations to OneDrive, Dropbox and Google Drive. Since you can place the container in any filesystem location you can use whichever cloud solution you prefer (I use my personal #Nextcloud instance). The application can be used completely offline if needed.
- Flexible security: Each container can have their customized security options so for example you can keep your really important work stuff protected with YubiKey, longer passcodes or similar. Convenience unlock via biometrics or pincode or both biometric *and* pincode. Desktop and mobile can use different methods to convenience unlock. Convenience unlock timeout is configurable.
- Support for flexible Duress PIN methods: Either present a fake (fully configurable) password vault, or wipe the vault if duress PIN is entered.
- No vendor lock-in since the database effectively is #Keepass4 compatible and can be managed with any Keepass compatible app. I use #KeepassXC to access the containers on other non-apple platforms.
- Good import support from inferior software such as #1password.
- Option for lifetime license instead of being leeched monthly fees.

Right, I'm jumping back to #1Password from #ProtonPass - after a week of usage, I found that while Proton Pass extensions seemed to work *slightly* better, I've lost a load of notes and other bits I stored within 1Password. Just straight up disappeared.

And I don't fancy finding out where they went / trying to manually copy it all.