Apple set to launch Passwords app, taking on LastPass and 1Password

midian182

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Cutting corners: Apple will have plenty on show at next week's Worldwide Developers Conference. According to reports, one of these will be a new password management app called Passwords that could challenge popular rivals such as LastPass and 1Password on the iPhone, iPad, Mac, and even Windows devices.

Apple has long offered iCloud Keychain as a password manager to its users, letting them generate, store, and sync passwords across iDevices and the Vision Pro. However, it's not as user-friendly or feature-packed as the top password managers available today.

The dedicated password app will be part of iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS 15, according to Bloomberg. It will be unveiled on June 10 at WWDC.

Apple's Passwords app will be powered by the iCloud Keychain and split user logins into different categories, such as accounts, Wi-Fi networks, and Passkeys. This is something other password managers do as well. Credentials saved in the app can be set to auto-fill when visiting corresponding sites or apps.

While it is primarily a product for Apple devices, Bloomberg says the software will work on Windows computers, too. It also generates authentication codes, making it work as an authenticator app just like Google Authenticator, Authy, and LastPass' authenticator.

News that Apple may be introducing a dedicated password app will likely worry other password managers, especially LastPass. The company made its free tier less appealing to users in 2021 when it forced them to pick a single device type for their passwords – computer or mobile – while other features became paid-for only. The biggest PR disasters, however, were the security breaches that the company has suffered, including one in 2022 that resulted in partially encrypted user login data being stolen.

The password manager app might be one of the few things Apple reveals at WWDC that isn't AI-focused. Cupertino is said to be giving Siri a major AI overhaul in iOS 18, enabling users to control specific app features using their voice. It will initially be available for Apple's in-house apps only, and the voice assistant will respond to only one command at a time, but Apple is working on expanding its functionality.

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"Apple set to launch Passwords app, taking on LastPass and 1Password"

The best place to manage your passwords is your Brain...!
 
"Apple set to launch Passwords app, taking on LastPass and 1Password"

The best place to manage your passwords is your Brain...!


Ah yes, my 100+ unique random passwords are easily managed by my brain. Thankfully I don’t have to remember anything else so I can devote everything to remembering them.
 
I will never understand why Dashlane gets no love? It's the only one that has never had a breach. Source: https://cybernews.com/best-password-managers/dashlane-review/
That's why it has no breaches, because it's not hyped like the others 😂 Let's keep it that way ;)

I'll be tempted to switch from Dashlane to Apple's password manager after this. I never understood why Microsoft or Apple didn't create a free password manager that works on all devices!
 
Ah yes, my 100+ unique random passwords are easily managed by my brain. Thankfully I don’t have to remember anything else so I can devote everything to remembering them.
Nice response…! But, I said best place to manage… didn’t say best place to store…!
 
I will never understand why Dashlane gets no love? It's the only one that has never had a breach. Source: https://cybernews.com/best-password-managers/dashlane-review/

?? The source you provided shows the following seven of the nineteen that were covered in the article as having no data breaches/security incidents:

Nordpass
Roboform
1Password
Dashlane
Bitwarden
Enpass
Keeper

As well, the lack of a statement of 'no breaches' doesn't inherently imply that the other twelve have had data breaches; it's just not stated. They list LogMeOnce and LastPass separately as unacceptable due to breaches.

I appreciate that you did provide a source, but you misrepresented what it actually says.

I think one of the reasons Dashlane doesn't get much love is that it is expensive compared to most of the others rated there. Bitwarden is the least expensive if you want the 'pro' version - $10/yr - and the free version contains enough features that most people will find it satisfactory; it's also the only one that's open-source.
 
?? The source you provided shows the following seven of the nineteen that were covered in the article as having no data breaches/security incidents:

Nordpass
Roboform
1Password
Dashlane
Bitwarden
Enpass
Keeper

As well, the lack of a statement of 'no breaches' doesn't inherently imply that the other twelve have had data breaches; it's just not stated. They list LogMeOnce and LastPass separately as unacceptable due to breaches.

I appreciate that you did provide a source, but you misrepresented what it actually says.

I think one of the reasons Dashlane doesn't get much love is that it is expensive compared to most of the others rated there. Bitwarden is the least expensive if you want the 'pro' version - $10/yr - and the free version contains enough features that most people will find it satisfactory; it's also the only one that's open-source.
The only one in that list perhaps but Proton Pass is also open-source!
 
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