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Mike Sheward

Top 3 most popular enterprise password managers:

3) Slack conversation with self
2) bash history
1) Microsoft Excel

14 comments
Ronah's ARP :verified_paw: :donor:

@SecureOwl

cat ~/.bash_history

ls
ls
ls
ls -l
ls -la
ls
w
w
w
login root R00tp4AAsssw0rDz
ls
cat /etc/motd
figlet boner
echo fart
echo STANKY
w
w
w
ls -la
ls
cd ..
ls
exit

Saegor

@RonahsArk @SecureOwl

touch ~/.bash_aliases &&
echo 'alias r=" rm ~/.bash_history"' >> ~/.bash_aliases

r
r
r

Vincent :coffeecup:

@SecureOwl I like (3). Very effective and transferable across platforms.

phyto

@SecureOwl you forgot about hardcoding into plaintext config files!

Bhante Subharo ☸

@SecureOwl A fellow owl. Awesome!🦉

I've introduced KeepassXC to several peers, but it's usually too hard for them to stick with in a disciplined way _longer term_, even though I feel it's done virtually everything it could to be convenient.
🙄
And that's not even enterprise-grade (as in, multiuser), but is rather just a single-user desktop app.

BTW: I'm that one #Buddhist monk who GPG-signs his Dhamma Talks (with no regrets, considering the following):
bleepingcomputer.com/news/secu

@SecureOwl A fellow owl. Awesome!🦉

I've introduced KeepassXC to several peers, but it's usually too hard for them to stick with in a disciplined way _longer term_, even though I feel it's done virtually everything it could to be convenient.
🙄
And that's not even enterprise-grade (as in, multiuser), but is rather just a single-user desktop app.

Dark Fox
@SecureOwl What about a text file on desktop with the password in its name?
moonwalker

@SecureOwl I'm glad that you did not mention sticky notes

bricky
@SecureOwl 4) Someone else (a family member does this)
Roy Tam
@SecureOwl what about Microsoft Word? (maybe even Google Docs/Spreadsheet)
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