![]() That being said, since I *do* use mobile, what I typically did in the past was to use the AES-KDF method for transformation, using the 1 second delay test, and then removing a single digit to make it compatible with my (then less powerful) mobile device. He did a great job (aside from not using Argon2, which the link you provided worked well for me in terms of actually making sense (I live for these computational things). I'm pleasantly surprised that the maker of the video went through all of that detail to show a good way to set up the database. Law #09: Absolute anonymity isn't practically achievable, online or offline. Law #08: An out-of-date antimalware scanner is only marginally better than no scanner at all. Law #07: Encrypted data is only as secure as its decryption key. Law #06: A computer is only as secure as the administrator is trustworthy. Law #05: Weak passwords trump strong security. Law #04: If you allow a bad guy to run active content in your website, it's not your website any more. Law #03: If a bad guy has unrestricted physical access to your computer, it's not your computer anymore. Law #02: If a bad guy can alter the operating system on your computer, it's not your computer anymore. Law #01: If a bad guy can persuade you to run his program on your computer, it's not solely your computer anymore. Ten Immutable Laws Of Security (Version 2.0) ![]() KeePass Password Manager: Full Detailed Setup ( good video on setup and using Keepass but choose the Argon2 method for Key transformation) As I don't use mobile and both systems I use are fast I can keep the settings high for both) (remember that if you share the database on other devices you'll need a value that allows it to open on the weakest device too. Then set the key transformation settings ( the link below helps provide information on how to choose good settings) Personally I'd recommend 128+ bit complexity (but that is way overkill unless some unknown major change in computing power comes along soon) Make sure you use a strong master password. Keepass Password Safe 2.43 update released Highly recommended tool for securely saving your passwords.
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