Is there a good way to store credentials outside of a password manager?Password manager vs password bookLooking for password manager in companyIs it a good idea to give users an additional password that they do not control?Web app crypto schemeWhat is the safest way to store passwords in a company for the case when the CISO leaves?How should I store a physical written copy of my password?How secure is a password protected file?Password manager vs password bookBest way to store Apple app-specific passwordaWallet Password ManagerHardware-Based Password Manager

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Is there a good way to store credentials outside of a password manager?


Password manager vs password bookLooking for password manager in companyIs it a good idea to give users an additional password that they do not control?Web app crypto schemeWhat is the safest way to store passwords in a company for the case when the CISO leaves?How should I store a physical written copy of my password?How secure is a password protected file?Password manager vs password bookBest way to store Apple app-specific passwordaWallet Password ManagerHardware-Based Password Manager













2















A lot of the users in my company are using their agendas to write down their password and usernames, or Excel sheets with a protected password. I'm hesitant to install software for password management after reading recommendations/feedback on them. Is there any other secure and user-friendly solution to store passwords?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Hajar Qh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 2





    Spreadsheets are a terrible choice. Offline password managers like KeePass are going to be your best option. Other than that I don't know what anyone could suggest - it's pretty much that or writing them in a physical book.

    – Polynomial
    5 hours ago











  • Maybe ask IT if they have a recommended solution. They may already have some software they allow.

    – Daisetsu
    5 hours ago






  • 6





    What is it about the recommendations/feedback that’s made you hesitant?

    – Ry-
    4 hours ago











  • Potential duplicate? security.stackexchange.com/questions/175075/…

    – schroeder
    3 hours ago















2















A lot of the users in my company are using their agendas to write down their password and usernames, or Excel sheets with a protected password. I'm hesitant to install software for password management after reading recommendations/feedback on them. Is there any other secure and user-friendly solution to store passwords?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Hajar Qh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 2





    Spreadsheets are a terrible choice. Offline password managers like KeePass are going to be your best option. Other than that I don't know what anyone could suggest - it's pretty much that or writing them in a physical book.

    – Polynomial
    5 hours ago











  • Maybe ask IT if they have a recommended solution. They may already have some software they allow.

    – Daisetsu
    5 hours ago






  • 6





    What is it about the recommendations/feedback that’s made you hesitant?

    – Ry-
    4 hours ago











  • Potential duplicate? security.stackexchange.com/questions/175075/…

    – schroeder
    3 hours ago













2












2








2








A lot of the users in my company are using their agendas to write down their password and usernames, or Excel sheets with a protected password. I'm hesitant to install software for password management after reading recommendations/feedback on them. Is there any other secure and user-friendly solution to store passwords?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Hajar Qh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












A lot of the users in my company are using their agendas to write down their password and usernames, or Excel sheets with a protected password. I'm hesitant to install software for password management after reading recommendations/feedback on them. Is there any other secure and user-friendly solution to store passwords?







passwords password-management






share|improve this question









New contributor




Hajar Qh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




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Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 5 hours ago









Jeff Ferland

34.5k778160




34.5k778160






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asked 5 hours ago









Hajar QhHajar Qh

111




111




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New contributor





Hajar Qh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Hajar Qh is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 2





    Spreadsheets are a terrible choice. Offline password managers like KeePass are going to be your best option. Other than that I don't know what anyone could suggest - it's pretty much that or writing them in a physical book.

    – Polynomial
    5 hours ago











  • Maybe ask IT if they have a recommended solution. They may already have some software they allow.

    – Daisetsu
    5 hours ago






  • 6





    What is it about the recommendations/feedback that’s made you hesitant?

    – Ry-
    4 hours ago











  • Potential duplicate? security.stackexchange.com/questions/175075/…

    – schroeder
    3 hours ago












  • 2





    Spreadsheets are a terrible choice. Offline password managers like KeePass are going to be your best option. Other than that I don't know what anyone could suggest - it's pretty much that or writing them in a physical book.

    – Polynomial
    5 hours ago











  • Maybe ask IT if they have a recommended solution. They may already have some software they allow.

    – Daisetsu
    5 hours ago






  • 6





    What is it about the recommendations/feedback that’s made you hesitant?

    – Ry-
    4 hours ago











  • Potential duplicate? security.stackexchange.com/questions/175075/…

    – schroeder
    3 hours ago







2




2





Spreadsheets are a terrible choice. Offline password managers like KeePass are going to be your best option. Other than that I don't know what anyone could suggest - it's pretty much that or writing them in a physical book.

– Polynomial
5 hours ago





Spreadsheets are a terrible choice. Offline password managers like KeePass are going to be your best option. Other than that I don't know what anyone could suggest - it's pretty much that or writing them in a physical book.

– Polynomial
5 hours ago













Maybe ask IT if they have a recommended solution. They may already have some software they allow.

– Daisetsu
5 hours ago





Maybe ask IT if they have a recommended solution. They may already have some software they allow.

– Daisetsu
5 hours ago




6




6





What is it about the recommendations/feedback that’s made you hesitant?

– Ry-
4 hours ago





What is it about the recommendations/feedback that’s made you hesitant?

– Ry-
4 hours ago













Potential duplicate? security.stackexchange.com/questions/175075/…

– schroeder
3 hours ago





Potential duplicate? security.stackexchange.com/questions/175075/…

– schroeder
3 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















10














Install a password manager. A good password manager is much, much better than anything you can do by yourself.



They are software created by security professionals, follow strict development rules, and are tested by a lot of people, and attacked by a lot of people. They have better chance of protecting your passwords than anything invented by the average, even the above average user.






share|improve this answer























  • how does one know which is a good password manage and if they actually follow all the strict development rules ?

    – Nigel Fds
    1 hour ago











  • @NigelFds Some, like Password, get audited by 3rd parties. support.1password.com/security-assessments

    – Schwern
    54 mins ago











  • I use Enpass and it's very well written.

    – ThoriumBR
    39 mins ago



















3














You're probably referring to the recent articles about flaws in password managers.




  • Password managers have a security flaw. But you should still use one. (Washington Post)


  • Password managers leaking data in memory, but you should still use one. (Sophos)

Its right there in the titles, password managers have flaws and you should still use one because they're more secure than what many folks do, like keeping passwords in Excel, emailing them around, pasting them into chat where they'll be logged by everyone...



All software has flaws. Password managers, and security software in general, is held to a higher standard than run-of-the-mill software. The flaws these articles are talking about in password managers are not rookie mistakes, but risk trade-offs.



1Password has a write up about the latest flaw. It's not a mistake as it is a consequence of a trade-off to avoid other worse memory bugs. The important bit is that your computer must already be compromised and you have recently typed in your master password. If your computer is already compromised, keeping your passwords in an Excel spreadsheet offers you no protection.



Password managers can do other things to add to your security.



  • Share and manage your passwords between all your devices, including mobile devices.

  • Share and manage passwords and credentials with co-workers.

  • Store more than just passwords securely.

    • GPG and SSH keys and passphrases


    • One-time password generators

    • Recovery keys

    • Security questions

    • API keys

    • Notes


  • Inform you of insecure passwords

    • Reused passwords

    • Password breaches


  • Generate secure passwords

  • Auto-fill passwords (avoids being shoulder surfed)

  • Auto-record new accounts

These avoid bad practices such as reusing passwords, using weak passwords, sharing them via email or chat or a shared document, writing them down (whether on paper or a file), and continuing to use breached passwords.






share|improve this answer
































    2














    Your only solution is to select passwords, that are hard to break but easy to remember, then you don't need to write them down anywhere!



    But seriously, maybe you can ask your IT support to install a password manager server for your whole company, then you don't need to install one on your machine.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    Paris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.















    • 1





      I think that the hesitation is with using a password manager in general, not the local install.

      – schroeder
      2 hours ago











    • But usually the passwords are for something, often for resources on the web. So if you are sending the password through the web, you can also store it on a server that is accessible only internally in your company network, secured by your real password, multiple users can share passwords for some resources, bla bla, <insert advertisment for pwd managment servers here> :-)

      – Paris
      1 hour ago


















    -2














    If you do not want a password manager program, print them out and store then in a safe or something secure rather than just a notebook like your co workers use.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    user197001 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.















    • 1





      This is fine as a backup for your super important passwords, like the password to your password manager, but for any day-to-day passwords you need them in a convenient and secure location. A safe will not cut it.

      – Schwern
      2 hours ago












    • Keeping the VPN password on a safe is not practical. For your bitcoin cold-wallet is fine, but not for everything.

      – ThoriumBR
      37 mins ago










    Your Answer








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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    10














    Install a password manager. A good password manager is much, much better than anything you can do by yourself.



    They are software created by security professionals, follow strict development rules, and are tested by a lot of people, and attacked by a lot of people. They have better chance of protecting your passwords than anything invented by the average, even the above average user.






    share|improve this answer























    • how does one know which is a good password manage and if they actually follow all the strict development rules ?

      – Nigel Fds
      1 hour ago











    • @NigelFds Some, like Password, get audited by 3rd parties. support.1password.com/security-assessments

      – Schwern
      54 mins ago











    • I use Enpass and it's very well written.

      – ThoriumBR
      39 mins ago
















    10














    Install a password manager. A good password manager is much, much better than anything you can do by yourself.



    They are software created by security professionals, follow strict development rules, and are tested by a lot of people, and attacked by a lot of people. They have better chance of protecting your passwords than anything invented by the average, even the above average user.






    share|improve this answer























    • how does one know which is a good password manage and if they actually follow all the strict development rules ?

      – Nigel Fds
      1 hour ago











    • @NigelFds Some, like Password, get audited by 3rd parties. support.1password.com/security-assessments

      – Schwern
      54 mins ago











    • I use Enpass and it's very well written.

      – ThoriumBR
      39 mins ago














    10












    10








    10







    Install a password manager. A good password manager is much, much better than anything you can do by yourself.



    They are software created by security professionals, follow strict development rules, and are tested by a lot of people, and attacked by a lot of people. They have better chance of protecting your passwords than anything invented by the average, even the above average user.






    share|improve this answer













    Install a password manager. A good password manager is much, much better than anything you can do by yourself.



    They are software created by security professionals, follow strict development rules, and are tested by a lot of people, and attacked by a lot of people. They have better chance of protecting your passwords than anything invented by the average, even the above average user.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 5 hours ago









    ThoriumBRThoriumBR

    23.9k75773




    23.9k75773












    • how does one know which is a good password manage and if they actually follow all the strict development rules ?

      – Nigel Fds
      1 hour ago











    • @NigelFds Some, like Password, get audited by 3rd parties. support.1password.com/security-assessments

      – Schwern
      54 mins ago











    • I use Enpass and it's very well written.

      – ThoriumBR
      39 mins ago


















    • how does one know which is a good password manage and if they actually follow all the strict development rules ?

      – Nigel Fds
      1 hour ago











    • @NigelFds Some, like Password, get audited by 3rd parties. support.1password.com/security-assessments

      – Schwern
      54 mins ago











    • I use Enpass and it's very well written.

      – ThoriumBR
      39 mins ago

















    how does one know which is a good password manage and if they actually follow all the strict development rules ?

    – Nigel Fds
    1 hour ago





    how does one know which is a good password manage and if they actually follow all the strict development rules ?

    – Nigel Fds
    1 hour ago













    @NigelFds Some, like Password, get audited by 3rd parties. support.1password.com/security-assessments

    – Schwern
    54 mins ago





    @NigelFds Some, like Password, get audited by 3rd parties. support.1password.com/security-assessments

    – Schwern
    54 mins ago













    I use Enpass and it's very well written.

    – ThoriumBR
    39 mins ago






    I use Enpass and it's very well written.

    – ThoriumBR
    39 mins ago














    3














    You're probably referring to the recent articles about flaws in password managers.




    • Password managers have a security flaw. But you should still use one. (Washington Post)


    • Password managers leaking data in memory, but you should still use one. (Sophos)

    Its right there in the titles, password managers have flaws and you should still use one because they're more secure than what many folks do, like keeping passwords in Excel, emailing them around, pasting them into chat where they'll be logged by everyone...



    All software has flaws. Password managers, and security software in general, is held to a higher standard than run-of-the-mill software. The flaws these articles are talking about in password managers are not rookie mistakes, but risk trade-offs.



    1Password has a write up about the latest flaw. It's not a mistake as it is a consequence of a trade-off to avoid other worse memory bugs. The important bit is that your computer must already be compromised and you have recently typed in your master password. If your computer is already compromised, keeping your passwords in an Excel spreadsheet offers you no protection.



    Password managers can do other things to add to your security.



    • Share and manage your passwords between all your devices, including mobile devices.

    • Share and manage passwords and credentials with co-workers.

    • Store more than just passwords securely.

      • GPG and SSH keys and passphrases


      • One-time password generators

      • Recovery keys

      • Security questions

      • API keys

      • Notes


    • Inform you of insecure passwords

      • Reused passwords

      • Password breaches


    • Generate secure passwords

    • Auto-fill passwords (avoids being shoulder surfed)

    • Auto-record new accounts

    These avoid bad practices such as reusing passwords, using weak passwords, sharing them via email or chat or a shared document, writing them down (whether on paper or a file), and continuing to use breached passwords.






    share|improve this answer





























      3














      You're probably referring to the recent articles about flaws in password managers.




      • Password managers have a security flaw. But you should still use one. (Washington Post)


      • Password managers leaking data in memory, but you should still use one. (Sophos)

      Its right there in the titles, password managers have flaws and you should still use one because they're more secure than what many folks do, like keeping passwords in Excel, emailing them around, pasting them into chat where they'll be logged by everyone...



      All software has flaws. Password managers, and security software in general, is held to a higher standard than run-of-the-mill software. The flaws these articles are talking about in password managers are not rookie mistakes, but risk trade-offs.



      1Password has a write up about the latest flaw. It's not a mistake as it is a consequence of a trade-off to avoid other worse memory bugs. The important bit is that your computer must already be compromised and you have recently typed in your master password. If your computer is already compromised, keeping your passwords in an Excel spreadsheet offers you no protection.



      Password managers can do other things to add to your security.



      • Share and manage your passwords between all your devices, including mobile devices.

      • Share and manage passwords and credentials with co-workers.

      • Store more than just passwords securely.

        • GPG and SSH keys and passphrases


        • One-time password generators

        • Recovery keys

        • Security questions

        • API keys

        • Notes


      • Inform you of insecure passwords

        • Reused passwords

        • Password breaches


      • Generate secure passwords

      • Auto-fill passwords (avoids being shoulder surfed)

      • Auto-record new accounts

      These avoid bad practices such as reusing passwords, using weak passwords, sharing them via email or chat or a shared document, writing them down (whether on paper or a file), and continuing to use breached passwords.






      share|improve this answer



























        3












        3








        3







        You're probably referring to the recent articles about flaws in password managers.




        • Password managers have a security flaw. But you should still use one. (Washington Post)


        • Password managers leaking data in memory, but you should still use one. (Sophos)

        Its right there in the titles, password managers have flaws and you should still use one because they're more secure than what many folks do, like keeping passwords in Excel, emailing them around, pasting them into chat where they'll be logged by everyone...



        All software has flaws. Password managers, and security software in general, is held to a higher standard than run-of-the-mill software. The flaws these articles are talking about in password managers are not rookie mistakes, but risk trade-offs.



        1Password has a write up about the latest flaw. It's not a mistake as it is a consequence of a trade-off to avoid other worse memory bugs. The important bit is that your computer must already be compromised and you have recently typed in your master password. If your computer is already compromised, keeping your passwords in an Excel spreadsheet offers you no protection.



        Password managers can do other things to add to your security.



        • Share and manage your passwords between all your devices, including mobile devices.

        • Share and manage passwords and credentials with co-workers.

        • Store more than just passwords securely.

          • GPG and SSH keys and passphrases


          • One-time password generators

          • Recovery keys

          • Security questions

          • API keys

          • Notes


        • Inform you of insecure passwords

          • Reused passwords

          • Password breaches


        • Generate secure passwords

        • Auto-fill passwords (avoids being shoulder surfed)

        • Auto-record new accounts

        These avoid bad practices such as reusing passwords, using weak passwords, sharing them via email or chat or a shared document, writing them down (whether on paper or a file), and continuing to use breached passwords.






        share|improve this answer















        You're probably referring to the recent articles about flaws in password managers.




        • Password managers have a security flaw. But you should still use one. (Washington Post)


        • Password managers leaking data in memory, but you should still use one. (Sophos)

        Its right there in the titles, password managers have flaws and you should still use one because they're more secure than what many folks do, like keeping passwords in Excel, emailing them around, pasting them into chat where they'll be logged by everyone...



        All software has flaws. Password managers, and security software in general, is held to a higher standard than run-of-the-mill software. The flaws these articles are talking about in password managers are not rookie mistakes, but risk trade-offs.



        1Password has a write up about the latest flaw. It's not a mistake as it is a consequence of a trade-off to avoid other worse memory bugs. The important bit is that your computer must already be compromised and you have recently typed in your master password. If your computer is already compromised, keeping your passwords in an Excel spreadsheet offers you no protection.



        Password managers can do other things to add to your security.



        • Share and manage your passwords between all your devices, including mobile devices.

        • Share and manage passwords and credentials with co-workers.

        • Store more than just passwords securely.

          • GPG and SSH keys and passphrases


          • One-time password generators

          • Recovery keys

          • Security questions

          • API keys

          • Notes


        • Inform you of insecure passwords

          • Reused passwords

          • Password breaches


        • Generate secure passwords

        • Auto-fill passwords (avoids being shoulder surfed)

        • Auto-record new accounts

        These avoid bad practices such as reusing passwords, using weak passwords, sharing them via email or chat or a shared document, writing them down (whether on paper or a file), and continuing to use breached passwords.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 1 hour ago

























        answered 2 hours ago









        SchwernSchwern

        641312




        641312





















            2














            Your only solution is to select passwords, that are hard to break but easy to remember, then you don't need to write them down anywhere!



            But seriously, maybe you can ask your IT support to install a password manager server for your whole company, then you don't need to install one on your machine.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Paris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.















            • 1





              I think that the hesitation is with using a password manager in general, not the local install.

              – schroeder
              2 hours ago











            • But usually the passwords are for something, often for resources on the web. So if you are sending the password through the web, you can also store it on a server that is accessible only internally in your company network, secured by your real password, multiple users can share passwords for some resources, bla bla, <insert advertisment for pwd managment servers here> :-)

              – Paris
              1 hour ago















            2














            Your only solution is to select passwords, that are hard to break but easy to remember, then you don't need to write them down anywhere!



            But seriously, maybe you can ask your IT support to install a password manager server for your whole company, then you don't need to install one on your machine.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Paris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.















            • 1





              I think that the hesitation is with using a password manager in general, not the local install.

              – schroeder
              2 hours ago











            • But usually the passwords are for something, often for resources on the web. So if you are sending the password through the web, you can also store it on a server that is accessible only internally in your company network, secured by your real password, multiple users can share passwords for some resources, bla bla, <insert advertisment for pwd managment servers here> :-)

              – Paris
              1 hour ago













            2












            2








            2







            Your only solution is to select passwords, that are hard to break but easy to remember, then you don't need to write them down anywhere!



            But seriously, maybe you can ask your IT support to install a password manager server for your whole company, then you don't need to install one on your machine.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Paris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.










            Your only solution is to select passwords, that are hard to break but easy to remember, then you don't need to write them down anywhere!



            But seriously, maybe you can ask your IT support to install a password manager server for your whole company, then you don't need to install one on your machine.







            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            Paris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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            edited 2 hours ago









            schroeder

            78k30173209




            78k30173209






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            answered 2 hours ago









            ParisParis

            211




            211




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            • 1





              I think that the hesitation is with using a password manager in general, not the local install.

              – schroeder
              2 hours ago











            • But usually the passwords are for something, often for resources on the web. So if you are sending the password through the web, you can also store it on a server that is accessible only internally in your company network, secured by your real password, multiple users can share passwords for some resources, bla bla, <insert advertisment for pwd managment servers here> :-)

              – Paris
              1 hour ago












            • 1





              I think that the hesitation is with using a password manager in general, not the local install.

              – schroeder
              2 hours ago











            • But usually the passwords are for something, often for resources on the web. So if you are sending the password through the web, you can also store it on a server that is accessible only internally in your company network, secured by your real password, multiple users can share passwords for some resources, bla bla, <insert advertisment for pwd managment servers here> :-)

              – Paris
              1 hour ago







            1




            1





            I think that the hesitation is with using a password manager in general, not the local install.

            – schroeder
            2 hours ago





            I think that the hesitation is with using a password manager in general, not the local install.

            – schroeder
            2 hours ago













            But usually the passwords are for something, often for resources on the web. So if you are sending the password through the web, you can also store it on a server that is accessible only internally in your company network, secured by your real password, multiple users can share passwords for some resources, bla bla, <insert advertisment for pwd managment servers here> :-)

            – Paris
            1 hour ago





            But usually the passwords are for something, often for resources on the web. So if you are sending the password through the web, you can also store it on a server that is accessible only internally in your company network, secured by your real password, multiple users can share passwords for some resources, bla bla, <insert advertisment for pwd managment servers here> :-)

            – Paris
            1 hour ago











            -2














            If you do not want a password manager program, print them out and store then in a safe or something secure rather than just a notebook like your co workers use.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




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            • 1





              This is fine as a backup for your super important passwords, like the password to your password manager, but for any day-to-day passwords you need them in a convenient and secure location. A safe will not cut it.

              – Schwern
              2 hours ago












            • Keeping the VPN password on a safe is not practical. For your bitcoin cold-wallet is fine, but not for everything.

              – ThoriumBR
              37 mins ago















            -2














            If you do not want a password manager program, print them out and store then in a safe or something secure rather than just a notebook like your co workers use.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            user197001 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.















            • 1





              This is fine as a backup for your super important passwords, like the password to your password manager, but for any day-to-day passwords you need them in a convenient and secure location. A safe will not cut it.

              – Schwern
              2 hours ago












            • Keeping the VPN password on a safe is not practical. For your bitcoin cold-wallet is fine, but not for everything.

              – ThoriumBR
              37 mins ago













            -2












            -2








            -2







            If you do not want a password manager program, print them out and store then in a safe or something secure rather than just a notebook like your co workers use.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            user197001 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.










            If you do not want a password manager program, print them out and store then in a safe or something secure rather than just a notebook like your co workers use.







            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            user197001 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer






            New contributor




            user197001 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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            answered 4 hours ago









            user197001user197001

            1




            1




            New contributor




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            New contributor





            user197001 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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            user197001 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.







            • 1





              This is fine as a backup for your super important passwords, like the password to your password manager, but for any day-to-day passwords you need them in a convenient and secure location. A safe will not cut it.

              – Schwern
              2 hours ago












            • Keeping the VPN password on a safe is not practical. For your bitcoin cold-wallet is fine, but not for everything.

              – ThoriumBR
              37 mins ago












            • 1





              This is fine as a backup for your super important passwords, like the password to your password manager, but for any day-to-day passwords you need them in a convenient and secure location. A safe will not cut it.

              – Schwern
              2 hours ago












            • Keeping the VPN password on a safe is not practical. For your bitcoin cold-wallet is fine, but not for everything.

              – ThoriumBR
              37 mins ago







            1




            1





            This is fine as a backup for your super important passwords, like the password to your password manager, but for any day-to-day passwords you need them in a convenient and secure location. A safe will not cut it.

            – Schwern
            2 hours ago






            This is fine as a backup for your super important passwords, like the password to your password manager, but for any day-to-day passwords you need them in a convenient and secure location. A safe will not cut it.

            – Schwern
            2 hours ago














            Keeping the VPN password on a safe is not practical. For your bitcoin cold-wallet is fine, but not for everything.

            – ThoriumBR
            37 mins ago





            Keeping the VPN password on a safe is not practical. For your bitcoin cold-wallet is fine, but not for everything.

            – ThoriumBR
            37 mins ago










            Hajar Qh is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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