6/20/2023 0 Comments IpasswordStarting today, you can share virtually anything you have stored in 1Password with anyone. Of course, doing so dramatically increases the risk that that data will be compromised in a breach. Or I could screenshot and send it as an image. ![]() Sure, I could copy those items from my 1Password vault and paste them somewhere: in an email, in a chat message. What if my in-laws came to visit and needed the Wi-Fi password? (They’re not 1Password customers, but rest assured, I’m working on that.) What if I needed to share a login with a contractor for a temporary project at work? I shared the Netflix login with my kids, I shared secure notes about doctor’s visits and grocery lists with my wife, and I shared all kinds of things with my colleagues to get our work done securely.īut sharing with anyone who doesn’t use 1Password wasn’t as easy. ![]() Back then, I often shared items in my 1Password vault with friends and family who also use 1Password. Before I was Chief Product Officer at 1Password, I was a 1Password customer.
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