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Hello:
From The Register:
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You probably can't trust your password manager if it's compromised
Researchers demo weaknesses affecting some of the most popular options
By Connor Jones
Mon 16 Feb 2026 // 16:20 UTC
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https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/16/ … _managers/
Academics say they found a series of flaws affecting three popular password managers, all of which claim to protect user credentials in the event that their servers are compromised.
Really?
I would have thought that a compromised server was indeed a compromised server.
No matter what the PMs vendors said.
Which is why I do not use passord managers.
Best,
A.
Last edited by Altoid (Today 08:53:26)
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We know Internet-based password managers are not safe. It's still best to keep the passwords in a local and decent password manager either on your secure machine or on a local server in your secured local network. Cloud-based password services are even worse.
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Hello:
... Internet-based password managers are not safe.
Always been a matter of common sense / common knowledge to me.
... best to keep the passwords in a local and decent ...
Little black book.
In my opinion, any system can be (eventually) hacked.
Best,
A.
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I agree keeping passwords locally is best.
I guess password managers are partly a generational thing too, when the world went to the "online by default" model. My entry into the world of computers was "offline by default" so passwords were either written down with stone age tools or in a local text file.
Unfortunately we are forced to be online and logged in to everything or it doesn't work! These days I use my Browser password manager but I keep that local and not synced.
It's not perfect I know.
"Has cat, eats cheese, drinks coffee, Chaotic Neutral " ![]()
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