Todd Rossi
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1,047 votesTodd Rossi supported this idea ·
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18 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Todd Rossi commentedUgh, this one is KILLING me!
If we can't get a global URL equivalency option, at least having the option to copy "Websites" URLs to other passwords would make life significantly easier.
Todd Rossi supported this idea ·An error occurred while saving the comment Todd Rossi commentedI was bothered by this not being implemented like LastPass, but I did find that individual password entries can have multiple URLs. Not ideal compared to a global list of matching URLs, but it does work. Just a bit of work if you have lots of accounts, like I, and presumably other software developers do, for the same servers/applications.
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7 votesTodd Rossi shared this idea ·
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5 votesTodd Rossi shared this idea ·
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1 vote
An error occurred while saving the comment Todd Rossi commentedWonder if this is a Chrome problem. LastPass used to do this to me. Despite having keyboard/mouse activity on my computer, it would lock anyway. Sometimes it would even think I was inactive when using the browser, so Chromebug? This problem affects Proton. Proton Pass locked while I was writing this!!! WTF?!
Either way, there needs to be better detection of user activity, definitely in the browser, but optionally on the system as well. Getting logged out unexpectedly is a big breach of user experience, and puts quality and trust in question.
This sounds like a perfect integration with Proton Drive! Attachments should be able to be added to specific password AND note entries in Proton Pass. Adding an attachment should transparently upload the file to a location on Proton Drive, and allow the attachment to be accessible at a minimum, from the password/note entry in Proton Pass, and optionally by going to the actual stored location within Proton Drive.
Proton is uniquely positioned as one of the few (only?) companies with a password manager and secure cloud storage as their core product offering. Google, Apple, Microsoft don't count here as none of them prioritize their password managers, and certainly don't care to properly integrate them with their cloud storage.