1Password vs. LastPass: Which is right for you?
If you’re comparing password managers, two names are likely to come up: 1Password and LastPass. So how do you know which is right for you?
If you’re comparing password managers, two names are likely to come up: 1Password and LastPass. So how do you know which is right for you?
Businesses can now automate threat detection for 1Password and their broader work environment with Obsidian Security, a security platform for software as a service (SaaS) tools.
Generative AI, large language models, and ChatGPT are dominating the headlines and people’s imaginations at the moment. While the incoming AI revolution may have some drawbacks, it also has the power to transform the way we learn, work, and play.
The moment you’ve been waiting for has finally arrived. Passkey support is now available in 1Password, letting you create, manage, and sign in with passkeys on a growing number of websites and apps.
Understanding how passkeys fit into the existing landscape of security and authentication is what our ‘versus’ series is all about. The goal of authentication is to verify that the person trying to gain access to a secret (e.g. an account) has permission to access it.
Data. Breach. We see these two words all the time in the news, on social media, and in company emails notifying us that our information might have been affected.
1Password Shell Plugins bring one-touch access to programmers' favorite command line interfaces (CLIs). I’ll never get tired of cutting steps from what was once a manual process, especially if we can secure that workflow in the process. And that’s exactly what shell plugins do.
Why do businesses choose 1Password over other options on the market? We have a few ideas but thought it would be better to ask one of our customers directly.
You may have heard that 1Password beta testers can sign into websites using passkeys stored in their vaults. We’re actively developing the internal library powering passkey authentication, and now we’re open-sourcing it!
Account password. Secret Key. These two pieces of information have been the backbone of 1Password’s security model for years. The Secret Key in particular is what makes 1Password fundamentally different to other password managers, and why you can be confident that your data is always safe, even if someone breached our servers.