I use Firefox built-in password manager with master password. Works on Windows, Linux, Android. I haven't tested but should also work on IOS and OSX.
It's opensource, does not store unencrypted passwords in the cloud, uses OS popup for master password prompt, and prompts only during browser startup, so it'd be very suspicious if opening a page would show the prompt. Also knowing master password is not enough to compromise it remotely - you'd also need Firefox account password which shoud be different and very complicated.
I have an idea. I've described it on the usenet group comp.mail.misc but got ignored so far.
Basicly it's a way to accept only bounce messages of e-mail that were sent by server they are bouced to.
Regards
Tometzky
-- ...although Eating Honey was a very good thing to do,
there was a moment just before you began to eat it
which was better than when you were... Winnie the Pooh
I use Firefox built-in password manager with master password. Works on Windows, Linux, Android. I haven't tested but should also work on IOS and OSX. It's opensource, does not store unencrypted passwords in the cloud, uses OS popup for master password prompt, and prompts only during browser startup, so it'd be very suspicious if opening a page would show the prompt. Also knowing master password is not enough to compromise it remotely - you'd also need Firefox account password which shoud be different and very complicated.
At work I've developed a system for exactly this in 2004. It was based on procmail. It is obvious.
And you could loose all data if your power supply will fail - sometimes they will fry all your hardware in "death cry".
I have an idea. I've described it on the usenet group comp.mail.misc but got ignored so far.
Basicly it's a way to accept only bounce messages of e-mail that were sent by server they are bouced to.
Regards
Tometzky