diff --git a/_includes/footer.html b/_includes/footer.html index 240d2c93..1b93db27 100644 --- a/_includes/footer.html +++ b/_includes/footer.html @@ -4,10 +4,10 @@

Navigation

@@ -37,13 +37,13 @@

Master Password is a security product and algorithm by Maarten Billemont, Lyndir (© 2011-2018).
- Usage implies agreement with our privacy policy and disclaimer. + Usage implies agreement with our privacy policy and disclaimer.

The Bash GuideGorillasGitHubSend Thanks

- - - + + + diff --git a/_includes/head.html b/_includes/head.html index 954896ac..afe23ad1 100644 --- a/_includes/head.html +++ b/_includes/head.html @@ -7,9 +7,8 @@ - + - diff --git a/_includes/header.html b/_includes/header.html index a9a94a11..14af6ac9 100644 --- a/_includes/header.html +++ b/_includes/header.html @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
diff --git a/how.html b/how.html index 2d48b867..986759d7 100644 --- a/how.html +++ b/how.html @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ nav: how

How do I use it?

-

+

One, two, enter.

Good security depends on ease of use.

@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ nav: how

Most browsers will then ask you to "save" the site's password. If you're comfortable with that, it's a good way of skipping the above steps and logging in even faster next time.

-

+

Getting started.

As explained, Master Password is not a password manager or a vault. It is not made to hold your existing site passwords — that would violate the principles it stands for and break the advantages it offers over ordinary password managers.

@@ -30,28 +30,28 @@ nav: how

All right. Here's Robert on his iPhone:

- +

He wants to sign up for Twitter. Robert filled in all the fields, except for password. Not wanting to worry about what his twitter secret is going to be, he switches to Master Password.

- +

Of course, he begins by unlocking his user with his master password. Robert can skip this step by going into Master Password's preferences and setting it to either save his master key or remember his login, but he choses not to.

- - + +

He creates a password for Twitter by using its bare domain name: twitter.com. He knows not to use mobile.twitter.com or Twitter or anything non-standard, because that would be very difficult to remember correctly on a later date. If he has multiple twitter accounts, he could prefix the name with a user name and an @: rmitchell@twitter.com, superbob@twitter.com.

- - + +

If the account Robert's signing up for is with a website that prohibits symbols for some daft reason, Robert can change the type to Basic or something similar instead. Robert can also bump up the complexity to get an even more secure password if he wants.

- - + +

When Robert created the site in Master Password, it copied the password to his pasteboard. Now, Robert just switches back to Safari and pastes his brand-new password he doesn't care to remember in twitter's password field. All done!

-

+

diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index 5e1ec33b..a053d762 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ header: large ---
-

+

What's your ?

Passwords are regarded as a "necessary evil" to having accounts online. We accept them as the way things are done online and try to adapt.
But upon reflection, we find that we've adapted quite poorly.
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ header: large

Sites everywhere expect us to come up with a secure and unique password for them. But we're not security professionals. We do our best to compensate for this unrealistic demand: to keep track of passwords, we reach for notebooks, our computers, apps, or we simplify them so we won't forget.
We've become symptomatic.

-

+

The real issue.

Humans are no good at remembering lots of passwords. But writing them down or saving them is dangerous, too.

Master Password avoids all the pitfalls: a cryptographic algorithm calculates your site's password for you, only when you need it.
diff --git a/what.html b/what.html index 98df4a6b..bacb2d64 100644 --- a/what.html +++ b/what.html @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ nav: what

What does it do?

-

+

Know one password.
Generate all the others.

@@ -86,5 +86,5 @@ nav: what

With Master Password you leave no passwords laying around. You no longer store passwords in commercial, proprietory apps and no longer send them off to the cloud. You are no longer tied to your laptop or the internet if you need to look one up. Even if a personal or natural catastrophe causes you loss, you can never lose your account passwords — all you ever need is your one and only secret master password and anyone's Master Password calculator app.

-

+

diff --git a/why.html b/why.html index b9d9e76c..6fa3c9cc 100644 --- a/why.html +++ b/why.html @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ nav: why

Why do I need it?

-

+

Passwords are frustrating.

We all struggle so hard, trying to keep our accounts secure.

@@ -19,9 +19,9 @@ nav: why