Passwords Vault is your go-to password manager designed to help you store all of your login credentials in one dashboard in Notion so you will never forget your passwords again, ever
Hey Product Hunt Community 👋
I am Kyaw Hein, the creator of Passwords Vault!
I am super excited to introduce my new product to all of you!
Passwords Vault solves the pain of forgetting your passwords, backup codes, answers to the security questions by helping you store your login credentials and personal information inside Notion dashboard
I was looking for a password manager like this for myself, but I couldn’t find it.
So I sat down and spent too many hours building it from the ground up.
Passwords Vault offers an all-in-one solution to help you:
- store your login user ID/email and passwords in one digital space
- store your answers to the security questions of your accounts
- store your backup codes to your accounts
- show/hide your passwords with the click of a button on your dashboard
- save your time on resetting your passwords again and again
I’ll be on here the entire day, so feel free to share your thoughts or questions below.
As an avid Notion user I use it for a plethora of things but I have to say this seems like a terrible idea. Notion is simply nowhere near safe enough to store your passwords in it. I won't go into all the reasons why since a simple google search will yield more than enough results to inform you about it.
Safety concerns aside, which honestly are too big to overlook in the first place, using a proper password manager (and there are some good free ones) will not only be way safer, but most of them offer extra functionality like auto-fill and password generation which make things way more convenient.
@kristijan_krstulovic@9to5notion that doesn't mean what you think it does. unless it's the end user who is holding the private keys either explicitly (in the form of the actual asc or other signing files/certificates) or stored in their browser, then the security is entirely out of both your control as the creator of this app and the user's control. you're putting all of your trust in notion, and that's not even scratching the surface on the myriad of other security concerns here - as kristjian has pointed out above. i can appreciate the hard work you seem to have put into this, but notion is not the perfect or ideal tool for everything, this is one example of something it should absolutely not be used for.
@9to5notion It doesn't have End-To-End Encryption nor does it have 2FA/MFA. Furthermore their employees can access people's workspaces and while Notion says they only do that when people request support with something, all it takes is one malicious employee.
So yeah, it's still nowhere near as safe as actual password managers and shouldn't be used for storing passwords or any kind of highly sensitive data.
I agree this might be risky. Don't you think Password Managers like Bitwarden or DashLane are safer options as they salt the keys and hash them? This might be risky.
@pranabgohain@9to5notion It's encrypted, but Notion holds the encryption keys, meaning they can decrypt your data at any time.
This is in contrast to password managers like 1Password or Bitwarden which have end-to-end encryption (only you can decrypt your data).
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