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by axegon_
1852 days ago
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> Companies that use password managers are infinitely better off with one then without. I second that opinion. I've worked in really large companies and I was blown away by the number of people who had {CompanyName}{number} as their password, where number is the amount of times the system required them to change their password. In a company with 6000 employees, we are talking 15-20% of all employees, including senior staff, engineers and manager with access to personal information of tens possibly hundreds of millions of people. This often falls into the category of "Nah, it's fine, I'm safe". And while there are circumstances in which you can feel secure in regards to your personal security at home and everything, we are talking large corporations with endless amounts of internal and external projects many are absolutely unaware of. Example: https://rtb-dsg.companyname.com which uses the company-wide ldap for authentication. Most people inside and outside the company have no idea what rtb-dsg is and it's better to keep it that way. So it's best to avoid taking chances. |
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