When surprises occur, it's like, oh, look. Certainly the way I approach solving problems in code has matured so that things are easier because I'm not painting myself into corners. Steve: I suspect that - I guess it would be a change in characteristics. Leo: Has it gotten harder or easier for you as time goes by? Steve: And I have a plan that's going to keep me coding until I'm finally, like, okay, where did the ENTER key go? What? Where? Anyway, so I guess my point is that, yeah, you know, I've been programming computers since I was 14, and because I love it. But he knew the Beatles, on the bright side. Little Reginald Dwight, the Beatles used to mock him. But when you look at the back story, like in his 20s and 30s he didn't think he was going to succeed. Steve: And, you know, you hear about these guys who are, like, just amazing. And the one that I thought was interesting was Elton John. Steve: On CNN, Fareed Zakaria had a series of interviews of, like, well, people we all know. You kind of keep - you get rusty quickly, so you have to keep going right? That's been my experience. Leo: You kind of have to, though, to be a good coder. Steve: And I said, well, you know, when you love what you do, you do what you love. And I apologize to my lovely wife, who just said, "You're a machine." Steve: I got a lot of work done, which is for me that's a good holiday. Great to be with you for this first podcast of 2023. Here he is, well rested, relaxed, hasn't had a security problem in weeks - not so - Steve Gibson. It's time once again, first show of the new year for Security Now!. Leo Laporte: This is Security Now! with Steve Gibson, Episode 904, recorded Tuesday, January 3rd, 2023: Leaving LastPass. What happened, what does Steve think, and what's he going to do? That's coming up next. Steve Gibson is here, and the topic of the day, really the topic of the whole show, is the topic everybody has wanted Steve to comment on since the news broke late last year about the LastPass breach. Quarter size (16 kbps) mp3 audio file URL: High quality (64 kbps) mp3 audio file URL: We made a simple matchup on both security platforms, here’s how they stack up.Description: This week, since a single topic dominated the security industry and by far the majority of my Twitter feed and DMs, after a brief update on my SpinRite progress we're going to spend the entire podcast looking at a single topic: LastPass. LastPass comes with MFA options which include YubiKey, Duo, Sesame, Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, and biometric identification for paid users.īitwarden advanced multi-factor authentication has limited options, only compatible with U2F, YubiKey, Duo, and Fido for paid users. It comes with “Password Hygiene” and “Vault Health Reports” which checks the strength of your security settings. Security Challenge - identifies weak passwords that should be changed only available to paid users Share passwords with unlimited users for paid usersĬomes with unlimited device synchronizationġ GB of secure storage on the LastPass cloud for paid users Supports unlimited devices but for paid users It runs on GNU GPLv3 and AGPLv3 license and available on macOS, Windows, Linux, Android, iOS and works on multiple web and mobile browsers in multiple languages.Ĭomparable features for both password managers Lastpass.Bitwarden: Owned and developed by Bitwarden, Inc.
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