Password Manager
- Version:
- Last Updated:
- Total Downloads:
- 1.0
- May 28, 2009
- 1,470
Nowadays you have to remember a multitude of user IDs and passwords. Any website, any internet bank, any blog site, each pin machine, etc. expects a user ID and password. And it is the most secure if you apply for each different user ID and / or password used.
Remembering all these user IDs and passwords is a growing problem. And therefore we developed Password Saver.
An application that can remember all user IDs and passwords for you. And even so it can generate a password for you.
In addition, you have the possibility to include images of your bank-, creditcards and other items to save. You can need these if you cards are stolen.
The only thing you need to remember is one master password and eventually a encryption file.
Special price: $ 14.99
Features:
- Saves all kinds of passwords.
- You can create, modify and delete groups.
- The groups can be arranged as a tree, so a group can have subgroups, those subgroups can have subgroups themselves, etc.
- You can take pictures of your creditcards and save them with the PIN.
- Password Saver can generate strong random passwords for you.
- You can define the possible output characters of the generator (number of characters and type).
- Add extra fields and notes to your items.
- Password Saver uses a strong encryption method that uses a couple of unique (pin)codes from the device where it is downloaded to.
- The complete database is encrypted, not only the password fields. So your usernames, notes, etc. are protected, too.
- Protection against dictionary and guessing attacks: by transforming the final master key very often, dictionary and guessing attacks can be made harder.
- In-Memory Passwords Protection: Your passwords are encrypted while Password Saver is running, so even when the operating system caches the Password Saver process to disk, this wouldn't reveal your passwords anyway.
- One master password decrypts the complete database.
- Alternatively you can use key files. Key files provide better security than master passwords in most cases. You only have to carry the key file with you, for example on a floppy disk, USB stick, or you can burn it onto a CD. Of course, you shouldn't lose this disk then.
- For even more security you can combine the above two methods: the database then requires the key file and the password in order to be unlocked. Even if you lose your key file, the database would remain secure.
- A password database consists of only one file that can be transferred from one device to another easily.
- You can search for specific entries in the databases.

