The part that companies resist, but I can't see any way to avoid, is that they need to send human beings to train campaigns and leave a phone number for them to call if they need help. This is not an insuperable technical problem, but it's a mental obstacle for tech companies
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We also need some laws or FEC rulings that give tech companies the green light to offer nonpartisan assistance and training around campaign security.
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So, I think this 1password offer is generous, thoughtful, but also illegal under US election law for Federal campaigns. Happy to welcome correction or confirmation by actual election lawyers
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The setting up is ok. The lack of integration with most apps is annoying
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Respectfully, I have found the setup process is very intimidating and I have not figured out how to do it in less than 60 minutes, while completely burning through people's mental budget for security hassle
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Can you dm me, I’d love to set something up.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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I have never found 1Password at all intimidating or difficult (maybe because I don't use Windows?), and support has always been excellent. But your point stands - even free security has to be easy to set up yet hard to hack. And remember, 50% of users are below average.
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Thanks for the kind words, Tim! I'll share this with my support team.

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Also: weeks before an election isn’t the best time to install and learn new software. Intent is
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The timing is unfortunate, but I'm very glad to see them take this step, which will certainly help for 2020 if they can get it past lawyers
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