Hashpass

Hashpass

A simple, stateless password manager for Chrome

1 follower

Launch tags:Tech
Launch Team

What do you think? …

Stephan Boyer
I made Hashpass because it's hard to memorize lots of passwords, and I don't like the idea of storing passwords in a proprietary database format + relying on a third-party tool to open it. Unusual for a password manager, Hashpass never writes anything to disk. Instead, it uses a simple formula to deterministically generate passwords, so there is nothing to sync and nothing to lose. You only need one secret key, so it's convenient—but it's also a single point of failure. More info on the tradeoffs: https://github.com/boyers/hashpass
Alexis Fogel
I like the concept, but I am afraid that because of all the security breaches, you would end up with too many keys overtime.
Robin Good
Hi Stephan, thanks for creating HashPass. I think there is good value in having a tool like this. About 6 months ago I have discovered http://my1.pw/ which seems based on the same approach and if you could improve on its shortcomings I think you would have done something valuable for everyone out there. My only humble complaint is with its usability. For non-tech users finding a prompt that says: Key and Hash does not mean much and I myself upon first use was quite confused as to what was expected from me and ended up hitting the Enter key without filling the field as that's what I understood was expected from me there. Still now I am confused in using your only field in the pop-up as the Tip suggest me to fill in a password, but the field I have in front of me is labelled *Key*. Also the phrase: "Press ENTER to fill in the password field." feels ambiguous as it seems to suggest me to press Enter without entering anything in the field. If you could provide even a minimalist text that states what to do, or provides a tiny example of the steps to follow (even on the Chrome store page), I think you would get a hell of a lot more traction and adoption. P.S.: I have just now discovered the info at https://github.com/boyers/hashpass but while this is well illustrated and documented I still get confused by the interchangeable use of the terms "password" and "key" and get totally off-sided when I read *hash*. Unless this tool is targeted at nerds only, I'd humbly welcome a more plain term terminology and consistency in its use as well as really simple step-by-step example that can be viewed and understood in one screen. My two cents. Keep it up!