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A password manager can help keep your private data secure, and they're easier to use than you may think.
Have a Motorola phone? Want to make it more secure? This secret PIN Scramble feature lets you do precisely that.
The Arduino ecosystem is an amazing learning tool, but even those of us who love it admit that even the simplified C Arduino ...
Autofill provides an easy way for malicious actors to access your password, so at the very least, you should disable automatic autofill. Making the switch to passkeys is the best way to protect your ...
Healthcare led all industries in 2024 breaches—over 275M patient records exposed, mostly via weak or stolen passwords. See how the self-hosted password manager by Passwork helps providers meet ...
Microsoft reports that organizations using Security Copilot have seen a 54% reduction in the time needed to resolve device policy conflicts (and a 22.8% drop in alerts per incident) within three ...
Battlefield 6 Open Beta Forces PC Gamers to Mess About With Their BIOS to Enable Secure Boot — and Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 Is Next Behind enemy lines.
Your apps contain a whole lot of data that you might want to keep private. Fortunately, you can lock them up behind a secure password.
Who said you can use your password manager only for passwords? I use mine to store literally everything, behind the same robust security.
In the meantime, you'll still need a secure password to protect your accounts. Instead of racking your brain, your iPhone can generate a strong password in just a few taps.
MetaMask introduces social login, letting users create and recover crypto wallets with Google or Apple accounts.