How 1Password is designed to keep your data safe, even in the event of a breach
How 1Password protects your sensitive data, and why an attack on 1Password would pose no threat to information stored in your vaults.
How 1Password protects your sensitive data, and why an attack on 1Password would pose no threat to information stored in your vaults.
PDF files have become an essential part of our digital lives. We use them to create and share invoices, reports, contracts, and countless other documents every day.
The security landscape is always evolving. This can make predicting what’s going to happen next complicated, but no less necessary.
It’s rare that a week goes by without at least one data breach making the news. Criminals are targeting companies of all sizes to see if they can slip past their digital defenses and steal confidential data.
LastPass, a competitor, recently announced that password hashes were included in an August 2022 breach of their cloud storage. Their notice claimed that if users had followed default settings, “it would take millions of years to guess your master password using generally-available password-cracking technology.” That claim is highly misleading.
Millions of people use Microsoft Excel to record, organize, and analyze important information. If you fall into this group, you may want to password-protect some of your most important spreadsheets and Workbooks.
We can probably all agree that we’re living in a state of permacrisis right now. After grappling with Covid-19, the world has been rocked by volatile stock markets, record-setting inflation, and the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. No wonder Collins Dictionary chose permacrisis as its word of the year for 2022.
1Password Shell Plugins brings the security and ease of use of biometrics to every tool in your terminal.