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Does Primary Password encrypt saved passwords?

  • 9 Antworten
  • 0 haben dieses Problem
  • 22 Aufrufe
  • Letzte Antwort von david

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Tried googling and couldn't find a definitive answer.

Tried googling and couldn't find a definitive answer.

Alle Antworten (9)

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No, it is just a protection for accessing that Thunderbird profile.

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Is there a way to implement password encryption that I'm missing? If not then how is this still not a feature of Thunderbird?... Claws Mail has had it since 2016 if not earlier

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The passwords are already encrypted. Use of the password manager just prevents anyone accessing Thunderbird. When you gain access to Thunderbird, the passwords are unencrypted.

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Excuse my probable lack of tech-savvyness here but what kind of encryption is that if data gets decrypted when Thunderbird opens? If a malware gets access the user profile folder, what's stopping a third party from decrypting it on their own, if there are no passwords or keys?

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If decryption doesn't take place, you cannot access your email. There must be a moment when the password is unencrypted so the account can be accessed. The password is encrypted again when submitting to email provider if account is using some form of SSL/TLS.

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Sorry but that doesn't seem to be addressing my question... what would stop a third party from accessing my email accounts if it manages to copy my user profile folder along with saved passwords?

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It would have to figure a way to decrypted the passwords, as they do not appear in the profile on disc.

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I see they are stored in logins.json, in an encrypted form. Whatever the encryption method is there, why would a malefactor need to decrypt it when they can steal the whole profile folder and use it on their device as their own?

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Now you're back to the primary password. It serves that need. And I have yet to encounter malware that copies the entire profile; they don't work like that.