![]() ![]() )KeePassXC therefore strictly limits communication between itself and the browser plugin to your local computer. KeePassHTTP is not a highly secure protocol and has certain flaws which allow an attacker to decrypt your passwords if they manage to intercept communication between a KeePassHTTP server and KeePassHTTP-Connector over a network connection (see and. ![]() I am using KeePass-Http connector (just such a useful and quick extension to enter logins/passwords!) and there are some security concerns re this:.I have the following 2 questions re this: I have been using Keepass2 which is just such an amazing password manager HOWEVER I would love to see it as an privacy by design and default enabled, build in plugin, that secures my future browsing behaviour out of the box, after installing & running Epiphany as my primary web browser.I have been using Xubuntu for several years now this question is regarding password managers under Linux/Ubuntu. It already works with Firefox & Chrome/Chromium and is mentioned by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) in their "Surveillance Self-Defense(SSD)" guide "KeePassXC is a feature-rich, fully cross-platform and modern open-source password manager." Guess the KeePassXC developement team would love to support your implementation if you just ask them! This could be solved by adding privacy by design support for KeePassXC-Browser in Epiphany. I just want to make my browsing behaviour more secure and sustainable.
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