Missing point. Msg apps don't change behavior. Pw mgrs, good or bad, encourage good pw hygiene (rnd, unique) than w/o one.
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Replying to @kylerankin @manicode
No. If you're thirsty, drink water - don't just drink any liquid that's around. See, it's not hard to be specific.
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Water is best but soda's better than drinking nothing at all.
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Replying to @kylerankin @manicode
Heh, the problem is you think password mgrs are all either soda or water. Some are bleach, gasoline, turpentine, etc.
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The fact that you couldn't think of any bad outcome from advising someone to "drink any liquid" speaks volumes
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Sometimes in security common case more important than edge case. Edge good for QASec, common often better for end users.
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Replying to @kylerankin @manicode
No. Why are you so desperate for "use any password manager" to be good advice? It isn't. Be precise, problem solved.
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In my 1st reply. There's positive side effects to pwm use in user behavior, unrelated to which pwm. IMO it outweighs risks
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Replying to @kylerankin @manicode
Seriously? You're still stuck on this false dichotomy? The options aren't only "don't use a pwm" or "use any pwm"
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As someone stumbling upon this conversation and ignorant of any 3rd, 4th etc option, what other options are there if its a false dichotomy?
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