![]() I wanted to view all logins with warnings, which was only accessible via the “Security Dashboard”. The deletion of obviously outdated / irrelevant accounts in the previous step helped quite a lot, bumping the security score up to 82.1%! However, we can do much better than that…Īgain I found myself fighting with LastPass’ interface a bit here. Luckily this is only a one-time process, as having to repeat this process regularly would be impossible! Password list Grouping these into categories took MUCH longer than it should have (multiple hours), due to LastPass’ somewhat unresponsive site. So domain management, programming resources, university, etc. Utility: Electricity, gas, water, phone, internet, etc.Travel: All the hotel / airline / train accounts that end up being created during travelling.Shopping: Amazon, eBay, supermarkets, hardware, etc.Personal: Healthcare services, pet care services, piracy sites(!).Online: Services that you “need” a login to when using the internet.Gaming: Steam, Epic Games, various sites with unique logins.Financial: Banking, investment, property purchases, etc.Android: Logins for apps, these are in a format unlike all other logins and were deleted later.I went for the following fairly generic categories: This way the list will become more manageable, easier to maintain, and I can clear out duplicates as I go. Password listįirst, I wanted to group all my passwords by category. ![]() So, the next step is tidying up the passwords into something more useful. 74.4% is pretty low, however I was pretty confident this was actually due to duplicated / bad data. Now all the passwords have been imported, we can use LastPass’ “Security score” to determine roughly how secure we are. I encountered a few “broken” passwords, where an Android app’s package name & password had been transferred, but this isn’t LastPass’ fault! Post-import state LastPass handles this pretty smoothly, even with 1000 passwords.
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