Ontario, Canada
2005
  |  By Katya Laviolette
The cybersecurity landscape is changing fast. At 1Password, that means we’re continuously evolving what we work on, how we work, and the culture we need to achieve our goals.
  |  By Chris Fowler
Zero-Shot Learning is a podcast about how AI gets built, secured, and deployed. Hosted by Nancy Wang, 1Password CTO, and Dev Tagare, Senior Director of Engineering at Google, it’s a builder’s view of the architecture and the decisions it takes to ship with AI.
  |  By Megan Barker
The developers and engineers here at 1Password are always working to improve our products. With all the active development to introduce features, fix bugs, and enhance the overall user experience, numerous code changes go into every release. We strive to ensure each iteration is better than the last and that new code doesn’t introduce vulnerabilities. A key part of this process is our Product Security (ProdSec) team’s review of all code changes that may have security implications.
  |  By Wen Li
This is the second post in a series that follows 1Password’s response to NIST’s call for input on how those principles should apply to agents. In our last post on agent identity, we introduced why the ability to reason makes agents fundamentally different from traditional machine workloads, why it breaks the assumptions traditional identity and access management was built on, and why real-time attestation establishes agent identity at runtime.
  |  By Evan Sandhu
Today we're shipping a new capability directly into 1Password Device Trust that lets admins query their fleets faster, without needing to be SQL experts. Now you can describe what you want to investigate in plain English, and Device Trust generates a ready-to-run SQL query you can execute across your devices in a single click.
  |  By 1Password
1Password has been recognized as a leader in the 2026 Gartner Magic Quadrant for SaaS Management Platforms.
AI agents now write code, fix bugs, and ship to production. But in order to do useful work, agents require credentials. At 1Password, one of our core AI security principles is that raw credentials should never be directly exposed to LLMs, but all too often, that’s exactly what happens: most teams sacrifice security for speed and hand agents secrets in plaintext.
  |  By Chris Fowler
"The hardest thing in security is always the chaos," according to Travis McPeak, Head of Security at Cursor. He shared this with Nancy Wang, CTO of 1Password, and Dev Tagare, Senior Director of Engineering at Google, on a recent episode of Zero-Shot Learning, the podcast about how AI gets built, secured, and deployed. "We're always going to have more that we have to be doing than we can actually do.".
  |  By Daryl Martin and Christian Rask
At 1Password, we regularly invite outside experts to challenge our assumptions and strengthen our security. We encourage security researchers to participate in our bug bounty programs, and have spent years building a collaborative research environment. We also believe in the benefit of open source software and standards, which raise the bar for the industry as a whole, while ultimately benefiting our 1Password customers.
  |  By Rachel Sudbeck
One of the less surprising findings of the 2026 Verizon Data Breach Incident Report (DBIR) is the fact that incidents targeting the Financial and Insurance sector are on the rise. As they put it, “This sector continues to be a favorite among attackers, which isn’t surprising given that its core business is handling money.”
  |  By 1Password
The prototype is the new PRD. In 2013, Facebook’s development of React changed the way software engineers build and write code. Today, LLMs are transforming that process again. This episode features Tom Occhino, React co-creator and current CPO at Vercel, whose work sits at the center of both shifts. In conversation with 1Password CTO Nancy Wang and Google’s Dev Tagare, Tom explores the platform changes driven by AI-written code, builds a full-stack app in real time, and sets up a deeper discussion on the security risks of agents building software.
  |  By 1Password
Resources for Setup.
  |  By 1Password
Secure secrets for agentic workflows with 1Password MCP Server and Codex As AI agents write, execute, and ship production code, they need access to systems like databases, APIs, and deployment pipelines. With 1Password Environments MCP Server for Codex, instead of putting credentials directly into prompts or files, we provision a secure runtime environment where secrets are mounted, used, and discarded, with user authentication required at the moment of access.
  |  By 1Password
Zero Knowledge Architecture Explained: How 1Password Keeps You Safe Ever wonder what actually happens when you save a password? In this video, we break down the security architecture behind 1Password and explain why even we can't see what's in your vault.
  |  By 1Password
Agents need boundaries | Fotis Chantzis from OpenAI Agents don't fit old identity models. As OpenAI’s Agent Security Lead, Fotis Chantzis has a front-row seat to see how agents push identity systems beyond what they were built to control. That’s where things start to fall apart and where most teams lose control.
  |  By 1Password
Many critical tools — social platforms, finance apps, and AI tools — can't be put behind SSO, leaving credentials shared over Slack, stored in spreadsheets, and reused across accounts. In this video, we walk through how 1Password extends identity security beyond SSO, giving teams like Marketing and Finance simple, secure access to shared credentials — while IT and Security gain the visibility, control, and auditability they need. Because attackers don't care about org charts, and now, neither do your security controls.
  |  By 1Password
Mindful habits across your company will protect your business and its customers. Download and read how.
  |  By 1Password
The right password manager will make the secure way of doing things the easiest way. Download and read how.
  |  By 1Password
We describe our security design in our white paper. We've documented our entire security design for experts to review.

1Password is the easiest way to store and use strong passwords. Log in to sites and fill forms securely with a single click.

1Password is the world’s most-loved password manager. By combining industry-leading security and award-winning design, the company provides private, secure, and user-friendly password management to businesses and consumers globally. More than 100,000 business customers, including IBM, Slack, PagerDuty, and GitLab, trust 1Password as their enterprise password manager.

The 1Password you need to remember:

  • Locked up tight: Your logins and private documents are securely stored in your password vault. This keeps your information locked away from thieves, hackers, and other unsavory types.
  • At the tip of your fingers: 1Password can record your usernames and passwords when you sign in to apps and websites. Our automatic form filler allows you to sign in to your online accounts with a single click, look, or touch.
  • Keep your secrets safe: Your privacy is our top priority. A combination of policy, innovative thinking, and a deep respect for your right to privacy ensure that your data is always kept safe and secure.

More than 100,000 businesses trust 1Password to secure their business and protect their data.