keepass.sourceforge.net — KeePass is a free/open-source password manager or safe to help you manage your passwords in a secure way. Put all your passwords in one database, which is locked with one master key or a key-disk. The databases are encrypted using the best and most secure encryption algorithms currently known (AES and Twofish).
Jul 20, 2005 View in Crawl 4
usererrorJul 21, 2005
keepass is the best. nuff said.
cr0yJul 21, 2005
I have been using it since its early days, very good, stable and clean program. I hight reccomend it.
tuxtooJul 21, 2005
I wish it had one feature though, that allowed you to have several data stores accessed by different master passwords so it could be used for a group of people.
krg123Jul 21, 2005
here is another one off sourceforge that I like:<a class="user" href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/pwsafe/">http://sourceforge.net/projects/pwsafe/</a>
_____3Jul 21, 2005
Storingwriting down passwords is a very bad idea:"With great power comes great responsibility"... If you can't remember your passwords without writing them down then you don't deserve the access, go back to school, find a new career... /got root?
photarJul 21, 2005
This is built into Mac OS X its called keychain.
bockmanJul 21, 2005
Try KisKis. Passwords, Files, anything, plus custom templates. And it's cross platform (anything that supports a Java VM).<a class="user" href="http://kiskis.sourceforge.net/">http://kiskis.sourceforge.net/</a>
majikJul 21, 2005
Snuffkin, no numb nuts. these type of programs let you use complicated passwords for any and all things you use that require a password (different passwords for each account) which is what you should be doing. but because you would then have to remember all the passwords, this is sometimes not quite practical. what this program does is store all your passwords in a easy, straight forward GUI where you can also manage them. so that your little brother gains access to your database of pw's, you password-protect the database....so in reality, you only have to remeber one password. i personally use Oubliette, which i submitted to digg ( <a class="user" href="http://digg.com/software/Store_passwords_and_other_sensitive_information_in_a_highly_secure_manner.">http://digg.com/software/Store_passwords_and_other_sensitive_information_in_a_highly_secure_manner.</a> ) but didn't get many digs :(
thycoticJun 7, 2006
tuxtoo,You need Secret Server - <a class="user" href="http://www.thesecretserver.com">http://www.thesecretserver.com</a> - it allows you to store all your teams passwords in one place and securely share them.Disclaimer: We make this product but our dev team also uses it and loves it.--Jonathan Cogley