share password between MAC and PC

Orddie

2[H]4U
Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
3,368
hi all,

looking for a solution which will allow password sharing between MAC and PC.

I suck at google and also looking for personal XP on products which will hopefully be referenced in this topic.
 
i just recently started using lastpass.

now i can't imagine doing without it.
 
you using the free version? saw a pay for use option for something like $12/year
I used the free version for about 2 years. A few months ago I upgrade to the paid version for mobile support. It works greats. I think maybe one site I use has some weird form that lastpass doesn't recognize so I have to manually copy and paste to login.
 
I use KeePass.

KyPass on iOS/MacOS and Official KeePass client on Windows. Hosting the database on my fileserver, password and keyfile protected.
 
I use KeePass.

KyPass on iOS/MacOS and Official KeePass client on Windows. Hosting the database on my fileserver, password and keyfile protected.


How exactly are you doing this? Everything I can dig up with Google is for DropBox or Google Drive.
 
How exactly are you doing this? Everything I can dig up with Google is for DropBox or Google Drive.

Using the KeePass client I have an SSH plugin that lets me retrieve the database using SFTP. And with KyPass and iOS I'm running WebDAV over SSL and access the file like that.
 
Using the KeePass client I have an SSH plugin that lets me retrieve the database using SFTP. And with KyPass and iOS I'm running WebDAV over SSL and access the file like that.



Do you keep the key file on your iDevice or pull that from your server as well?
 

https://blog.lastpass.com/2015/06/lastpass-security-notice.html/

Was my master password exposed?
No, LastPass never has access to your master password. We use encryption and hashing algorithms of the highest standard to protect user data. We hash both the username and master password on the user’s computer with 5,000 rounds of PBKDF2-SHA256, a password strengthening algorithm. That creates a key, on which we perform another round of hashing, to generate the master password authentication hash. That is sent to the LastPass server so that we can perform an authentication check as the user is logging in. We then take that value, and use a salt (a random string per user) and do another 100,000 rounds of hashing, and compare that to what is in our database. In layman’s terms: Cracking our algorithms is extremely difficult, even for the strongest of computers.
 
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