| > ..i do not have such a thing. I use plain Xorg with Window Maker and i have removed anything i deemed unnecessary from my PC. So you don’t use a web browser then? I guess your posts here must appear by magic. > This is about ANYTHING that can go on the clipboard that can be sensitive. Hence why I’ve repeatedly used the term “secrets” and not “passwords”. The password manager example was just an illustration because this entire concept seemed weirdly alien to you. But secrets stores are not just for passwords and nor do they need to hold secrets for long durations either. Again, I implore you to actually do some reading on this topic before making daft assumptions. Look into Hashicorp Vault for example. Now I’m not suggesting everyone should manage their own Vault instance; but if you’re going to create a new API anyway then you might as well abstract that around similar tooling which is managed by the OS rather than configured by the user. I mean why reinvent the wheel (and badly too) when this approach is proven? > How about following the HN commenting guideline about "Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. You mean like your pedantry about Linux being a kernel when you knew full well the context that term was used in? Your ego here is getting in the way of you learning some new technology (well, I say “new” but it really isn’t). This is already the direction the industry has already moved. |
Of course i use a web browser. What i do not have is a generic store like the one you describe - my web browser does not provide an API for other applications in my desktop to access whatever is stored in it.
> Hence why I’ve repeatedly used the term “secrets” and not “passwords”.
And yet you used them explicitly for storing passwords.
> The password manager example was just an illustration because this entire concept seemed weirdly alien to you.
Clearly in your message here:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30220104
...you only refer to storing credentials (ie. passwords) and here:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30220390
you explicitly refer to "password stores".
Meanwhile from the very beginning, like in here:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30220062
i refer to "copying data" and even if it is in the context of passwords, i make explicit in the very first reply i made to you:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30220227
...that i do not refer to just passwords but anything that can be copied to the clipboard and passwords was just an example.
That you think that "concept seemed weirdly alien" to me can only be seen as an indication that you do not read what i write.
> You mean like your pedantry about Linux being a kernel when you knew full well the context that term was used in?
As i already wrote previously, that part was to make it clear that this isn't something you can depend to be there "on Linux" because not everyone's setup has one - like mine.
> Your ego here is getting in the way
Does it really? From my perspective you entered the discussion with a polemic tone and when i tried to explain my position you doubled down, ignoring what i wrote and even started writing that i do not even know what i have installed on my own computer.