Where would you recommend me to store the Keepass file?


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Thread: Where would you recommend me to store the Keepass file?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2024
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    Red face Where would you recommend me to store the Keepass file?

    good day dear community


    Where would you recommend me to store the Keepass file?

    well i have installed Keepass some weeks ago - since i have heard alot: keepass seems to be a safe - option.

    the question is: how to treat - that is where to store the file?!

    I have my personal documents in my NAS stored. Would it be safe to use another place for this file?

    what do you do with your KeePass password file?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2023
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    I doubt you could ever get a straight answer to that question.. It's peoples secret, like they're passwords are their secrets. It's like a stranger knocking on the door, asking: 'Where do you hide your outside emergency house key?'.. Do you have a redmond IP..?

    Best way to get answers on keepass stuff would be to google surf: "ubuntu how to best utilize keepass"..

    My solution for storing private files is to store them on the other desk in the five notebooks that have their net-cards removed...
    Last edited by Demanding Truth; 11-19-2024 at 07:38 AM.

  3. #3
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    Apr 2011
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    Largo, FL.
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    I'd write it down and put it in my wallet.

  4. #4
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    Dec 2023
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    165
    I'd need a huge purse with wheels...

    I've quit saving sensitive data in netbooks.. There's too much unscrupulous evolved and evolving high-tech organized crime in the world and on the Web these days.. It's like a massive global war out there, as if everything is in a huge global war against truth, life, love, honesty, and reality.. Now days there's almost no such thing as truth, security, privacy... People need two computers theses days, one for playing on the Web, which doesn't have anything in it that they don't care if the data gets stolen or erased, and a second one that can't net-connect, with all their precious data in it.. Transfer data via flash drives and external hard drives...

    Probably a good way to keep passwords super safe and secure is to make a few passwords flash-drives.. I'm gonna try that today with three flash drives, then delete all that sensitive security data from this netbook, then leave the netbook on all day and night net-connected to google, doggy's piles, go quackquack, and youtube...

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2025
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    for handwritten publishers

    multiplies (see also article

  6. #6
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    Nov 2024
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    hello dear Steve, hello dear Demanding truth,


    thank you for the reply - and for sharing your ideas and experience. Glad to hear form you.

    Your shared ideas help alot here.




    Thank you so much!!!

    BTW: I really am a big fan of this forum - as in amazingly packed with ideas and tips and help😍 sensational 👏👏💥

    Keep up your awesome work!!

    Greetings

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2025
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    handwriting matters

    manuscripts significantly

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2024
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    86
    g day

    dear juliajuioroz463

    thank you for sharing your ideas: Great!!
    ....Love Linux - and the Digital Innovation Hubs (network) supporting digital future: towards digital transformation, commitment to sustainability,

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2002
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    1,293
    FYI juliajuioroz463 appears to be a spammer and more or less just posted some random gibberish. As far as I know the actual file is encrypted and is located in your home directory. I would not necessarily change that and where you keep a backup would not matter as long as you do not forget the password. Passwords hand written down as Steve R Jones and stored somewhere is not a bad idea. You do not have to worry about forgetting a password or when the computer or hard drive fails.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Nov 2024
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    hello and good evening dear Michaelk

    thank you!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by michaelk View Post
    FYI juliajuioroz463 appears to be a spammer and more or less just posted some random gibberish. As far as I know the actual file is encrypted and is located in your home directory. I would not necessarily change that and where you keep a backup would not matter as long as you do not forget the password. Passwords hand written down as Steve R Jones and stored somewhere is not a bad idea. You do not have to worry about forgetting a password or when the computer or hard drive fails.
    thanks - thank you -

    Passwords hand written down as Steve R Jones and stored somewhere is not a bad idea. You do not have to worry about forgetting a password or when the computer or hard drive fail/
    convinced - thank you very much for the tipps.
    ....Love Linux - and the Digital Innovation Hubs (network) supporting digital future: towards digital transformation, commitment to sustainability,

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Dec 2023
    Posts
    165
    Storing critical keys data is obvious that you never store it in/on a net device, because the internet is a corrupt war zone now owned and operated by organized crime and hell's religions.. You store it in a couple top quality flash drives.. When you need it you simply plug the flash drive into the USB slot with the machine not net connected.. Copy the PW, paste it, and pull the Flash drive... No one gets your passwords unless they have access to your pant's pocket...

    Make your passwords impossible to guess.. I make my passwords long and gibberish, like 'fLezleblopgrimpaviklyscrOoch..' Not even your pathetic cristinsanity pretend gods nor yer mummies could guess my passwords...

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