![]() So no way to get into your mSecure database with your iris or finger (right) you also get a unique QR code to your email address - we'll come back to this later, as it's your way to link mSecure installations. The sign up process leads you through a very secure master password - it's the only password you'll ever need, in theory, though I was very disappointed that no Windows Hello support has been implemented. Here's a spin through mSecure then, in its UWP form for Windows 10: Which is why I was interested to test out mSecure, whose developers are clearly star Windows coders. There are even Window 10 Mobile versions, though none are implemented that well (I've spent two years researching them). It's why I standardised on an open source secure database, KeePass, many years ago, for which there are clients for all platforms under the sun. You don't need to remember either of these but there will be one day, at a friend's house or when travelling and when your phone's battery is dead or whatever, then you'll sit down at a strange computer and your brain will pop the details in for your fingers. Or that your bank account login id is '037391'. With a secure database, passwords and PINs are shown when you need them and - subconsciously - your brain will register that your Facebook password is 'MyFaceP83' or whatever. Password automation systems are never 100% reliable, are prone to vulnerabilities, are typically limited in the types of data they can store, plus you never get to see your own passwords because they're handled without your input. If you need information from it then you'll find that anything in the database can be copied to the clipboard manually and pasted elsewhere - just don't expect Edge automation. The focus here is on remembering and protecting everything that's secret about your life. MSecure is a 'secure database' in the classic sense - it's not a web site password auto-fill system like Lastpass (though there's a rudimentary clipboard copying system into Edge). Making up for lost time, here's a look at the latest generation of this massively sophisticated personal security tool. Partly the developers' fault for not, you know, contacting us - ever, but we should have spotted it anyway. And at some point a Windows 10 UWP version was released. secret stuff manager) system before on AAWP. Unbelievably, we don't seem to have reviewed this secure database (i.e.
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