![]() ![]() My advice to people is start with a base password, and then add to it bassed on the tier category I personally dont use it but for people who are just incapabile of using good password policies I recommend it to them. On the other hand it is all your eggs in one basket so if lastpass is compromised, EVERYTHING is now compromised. Using this is far better then using the same exact password for everything or a weak password. OK thanks, I created a new different complex not that long master password Lastpass seems to be the best balance in password management. ![]() If you are still paranoid beyond that, just switch to using Keepass but I think you will find it to be too much of a pain to maintain and access. The only way a LastPass account or vault could be compromised is from a user falling for social engineering. Since AES-256 salted with SHA-256 would take thousands of years for a farm of super computers to crack, there is no risk of being hacked in the traditional sense. They only have the salted hash response to your password vault. LastPass has no knowledge of your master password so if you lose it, you are screwed. For example I keep my master password on multiple safe, offline locations and only use it on my LastPass account. There is no point to worry about security if you're just going to use the same password in multiple places. Since you only use one password to log in to LastPass it better be complex, lengthy, and unique to just your lastpass account. ![]()
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