Saturday, July 15, 2006

Password Profiler Secures and Automates Online Passwords and Log-Ons

Passwords are the most critical safeguard for your online identity, but you end up juggling dozens or compromising your security by using the same string for everything from your favorite news outlet to your online banking site. Or worse, faced with the fear of forgetting a critical password, you end posting the keys to your online well-being all over your monitor on sticky notes—not a secure password management strategy.

Let Password Profiler strip the little stickies off. Our latest PC Magazine premium utility will manage your passwords efficiently, easily, and securely, safely storing your log-ons, passwords, pin numbers, and other sensitive information in an encrypted file, and even letting you access and log on to your favorite Web sites with a single click. The utility can even fill in Web forms with any data you choose, including address and credit card information, if you desire.

Installing the Utility and Setting Your Master Key

Once you've downloaded Password Profiler from the PC Magazine Utility Library to a folder on your Windows 2000 or XP machine, unzip the file PasswordProSetup.zip and double-click on PasswordProfilerSetup.exe.

When you first launch Password Profiler, it will prompt you to create your Master Key—the password that, from this point on, will allow you access to the entire utility and all the information stored within it, including other passwords. Don't lose your Master Key! Without it, you cannot access information in the utility.

Note that we did not build in a method for you to regain your Master Key should you forget it, because such a capability would create a security hole an interloper could exploit. We strongly recommend that, when creating your Master Key, you use the helpful Hint option to enter a word or phrase to jog your memory should you forget your Master Key.

When setting up the utility, security junkies can pick which Crypto Service Provider and Encryption algorithm to use. Password Profiler lets you chose from the native cryptographic service libraries built into Windows (which you can read about in Microsoft's MSDN Library). For most users, though, staying with the utility's default selections is the best course.


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