![]() In report dialogs, passwords (and other sensitive data) are now hidden using asterisks by default (if hiding is activated in the main window) the hiding can be toggled using the new ‘***’ button in the toolbar.In export confirmation dialogs, the text of the ‘OK’ button is now changed to ‘Confirm Export’.Export confirmation dialog banners now have a yellow-orange background. ![]() Added dialog ‘Enforce Options (All Users)’ (menu ‘Tools’ → ‘Advanced Tools’ → ‘Enforce Options’), which facilitates storing certain options in the enforced configuration file.Triggers, global URL overrides, password generator profiles and a few more settings are now stored in the enforced configuration file.Auto-Type can be protected against keyloggers, too.Ĭhanges in KeePass 1.54 Professional: New Features: The master key dialog can be shown on a secure desktop, on which almost no keylogger works.The passwords entered in those controls aren’t even visible in the process memory of KeePass. None of the available password edit control spies work against these controls. Security-enhanced password edit controls: KeePass is the first password manager that features security-enhanced password edit controls.Protected in-memory streams: when loading the inner XML format, passwords are encrypted using a session key.Process memory protection: your passwords are encrypted while KeePass is running, so even when the operating system dumps the KeePass process to disk, your passwords aren’t revealed.Protection against dictionary and guessing attacks: by transforming the master key component hash using a key derivation function (AES-KDF, Argon2, …), dictionary and guessing attacks can be made harder.The output is transformed using a key derivation function. No attacks are known yet against SHA-256. SHA-256 is a 256-bit cryptographically secure one-way hash function. SHA-256 is used to hash the master key components.The complete database is encrypted, not only the password fields.Federal government standard and is approved by the National Security Agency (NSA) for top secret information. ![]() Both of these ciphers are regarded as being very secure.
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