Most browsers just keep that crap in a plaintext file. And most of the password manager vulnerabilities, IIRC, have been with their browser extensions.
I keep them in my brain’s password manager. No way would I ever save credit card numbers on a PC or website. Far too many of my passwords have been stolen over the years to fall for that.
Okay, I’ll be that guy: Keep em in your password manager.
And don’t save them in your browser. In fact, turn autofill off for your browser altogether.
You can autofill from your password manager, or copy and paste instead.
Usually, security comes at the cost of inconvenience, but in this case it’s actually the opposite.
Why not in the browser, though? So convenient.
Disclaimer: I keep them in my Bitwarden account. 👍
Most browsers just keep that crap in a plaintext file. And most of the password manager vulnerabilities, IIRC, have been with their browser extensions.
Many years ago maybe…
Its probably been that long since i stored a password in a browser tbh.
Does Firefox not do that anymore?
Not according to their website.
Well then. 😎🔒
This claim doesn’t really pass the smell check if I’m going to be perfectly honest
I keep them in my brain’s password manager. No way would I ever save credit card numbers on a PC or website. Far too many of my passwords have been stolen over the years to fall for that.
Weirdly, that ends up being more your bank’s problem than yours since they almost always comp you for credit card theft.
You’re not wrong, of course, just… society gets along just fine being stupid and irresponsible, lol.