Chrome, Firefox expose passwords in plain text, IE9 does not!

Discussion in 'privacy problems' started by PJC, Nov 28, 2011.

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  1. PJC

    PJC Very Frequent Poster

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  2. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

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    Firefox offers a master password, which will not allow anyone to see the other passwords unless they know the MP.
     
  3. elapsed

    elapsed Registered Member

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    Good for IE9 users, but it's probably the same for previous IE versions.
     
  4. PJC

    PJC Very Frequent Poster

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    What about Chrome?
     
  5. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

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    There are password recovery utilities that make all of this not matter anyway because they are still too easy to pull out of any browser. What's the old saying? "If someone else has physical access to your computer, it isn't your computer anymore." :ouch:
     
  6. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

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    Hmmm.... I'd have more things to worry about then.
     
  7. Trooper

    Trooper Registered Member

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    Pretty crazy. However I do not store passwords in any of the browsers I use.
     
  8. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

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    I just looked at my Chrome. I couldn't find how to view passwords in plain text. Can anyone point out how to do this?
     
  9. HAN

    HAN Registered Member

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    Beyond Windows itself, nothing on our PC is under attack anymore than the browsers we use. Therefore, it seems to me that the absolutely riskiest place to store passwords is in a browser (both from a physical and cyber access point of view.) I have never done it and use every chance I get to warn people against it!
     
  10. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

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    True. But I'd still like to know how to see my passwords in plain text in Chrome as claimed by the OP's link. If it is not possible (and I think it is not possible), then I will report this thread as propaganda and request that it be deleted entirely.
     
  11. Robin A.

    Robin A. Registered Member

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    It seems to me obvious that passwords must not be stored in a browser, any of them.
     
  12. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

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    Vasa1, you can go view all of your passwords Wrench-> Options -> Personal Settings -> Manage Passwords.

    Chromium devs refuse to add a master password to it under the pretense that it "is too easily bypassable." It's pretty ridiculous.
     
  13. Noob

    Noob Registered Member

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    The first thing i do when installing Chromium, set the option never offer to save passwords :ninja:
     
  14. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

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    Thanks, I finally saw that! And now that you mention it, I remember posts about that over in the Chrome Help Forum. I agree that if something could easily be done, it should. Not doing so needlessly opens doors.
     
  15. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

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    On the other hand, if you keep forgetting passwords, like I do, it's not necessarily a bad thing. ;)
     
  16. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

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    I always store my passwords in the browser.
     
  17. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

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    It's the most convenient way for most sites. How vulnerable do you reckon passwords are stored in a browser?
     
  18. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

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    That's hard to say. A malicious extension could access them if the user allows it to.
     
  19. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

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    Yeah, that makes sense. I suppose it all boils down to how much you trust your extensions. As a rule I only tend to download extensions that are well established & used by many people. I'm pretty OK with most Mozilla extensions, however, I worry a bit about Chrome extensions/add-ons.
     
  20. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

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    None of my extensions deal with passwords so I'm not worried about that.
     
  21. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

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    I don't store the "financial" ones.
     
  22. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

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    Yeah, you should be OK I reckon.

    *Hmmmm .... wonders about the Yahoo! Mail Notifier I just installed ... *
     
  23. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

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    I always found it disturbing that when you install Firefox it offers to import favorites and PASSWORDS and does so just by checking the option. If it is that easy for them to import your passwords how hard it it for any program to get them without asking? Yes, you would probably have to give said program elevated access to do so, but how many average users will just ok anything that asks?
     
  24. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

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    Come to think of it IE Tab + (FF 8+, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3.6, 3.5, SeaMonkey) can sync cookies.
     
  25. Dude111

    Dude111 Registered Member

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