Yeah, and I support anything that makes security by default easier. I'd love to see adoption numbers for in-browser password managers, though, because I feel it's not very high yet.
Because without that the argument of "everyone has a password manager" fails. Tons of people don't have 1Password or Bitwarden or Lastpass or KeypassXC or whatever.
So sure, they might technically have a password manager installed, in that every major browser has a password manager included. But do they actually use it? That's what really matters.
Towards people with password managers, or towards people who want to have the freedom to choose how they log in? I also hate those damn login emails.
But everyone has a password manager now. They come builtin to all major browsers, Apple ecosystem, etc. My non-technical girlfriend uses one.
Yeah, and I support anything that makes security by default easier. I'd love to see adoption numbers for in-browser password managers, though, because I feel it's not very high yet.
> I'd love to see adoption numbers for in-browser password managers, though, because I feel it's not very high yet.
Why specifically in-browser?
Because without that the argument of "everyone has a password manager" fails. Tons of people don't have 1Password or Bitwarden or Lastpass or KeypassXC or whatever.
So sure, they might technically have a password manager installed, in that every major browser has a password manager included. But do they actually use it? That's what really matters.
Yeah, this is why. "in-browser" was unclear when I also meant the iOS ecosystem password manager and stuff.