The article I linked to above was published on March 9th by Forensic Magazine. But in the final analysis it appears that this potential leak was more that…meaning that it had much more potential to be bad than it actually was in the final analysis. For several days following the first reports speculation about how bad these leaks might be ran rampant online. The news broke about the Cloudbleed leak online Feb. You can read more about Cloudbleed here if you missed it. The scare when Cloudbleed was first announced ![]() In case you missed it, Cloudbleed, which occurred a few weeks ago was another potentially massive data leak of personal information…early reports suggested it might be on the same scale as Heart Bleed. Which is sad and surprising since I’ve always been one of Dashlane’s biggest supporters. Apple’s built-in Keychain is faster and easier…but both have a lot of limitations…so I’m hunting for a better password manager that works well on ios devices. ![]() The Password Manager is really disappointing but what’s even more disappointing is how difficult it is to change passwords individually using Dashlane’s ios app. I was in for a surprise when I finally got around to doing that today. I know I shouldn’t have waited so long, but I’ve had a lot going on lately and really thought using Dashlane’s Password Manager would be a breeze. Follow Tweet I was Relying on Dashlane to Help Change my 350 Passwords following the Cloudbleed Data Leak…But Discovered It Wouldn’t Really Do that Using an iPad
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