
This is why we recommend stepping up to the paid plan, which at about $15 a year, is the lowest-priced password manager on this list. Also, the free plan only allows storage for a total of 15 passwords and documents, which won’t be enough for most users. Dark web monitoring will be added in February, according to a spokesperson, but the lack of password sharing means that Kaspersky might be best for individuals, not couples, families or small businesses. Missing from Kaspersky’s password manager are dark web monitoring and password sharing. This allows you to store all of your sensitive files in one secure place for easy access, something we haven’t seen with other password managers that typically cap storage at a set amount. There’s a free plan, but you’ll get unlimited encrypted storage with the Premium version. With a low price, strong reputation and unlimited passwords (for paid users), Kaspersky is hard to beat.
Available on : Windows, macOS, iOS, Android, Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Safari, Edge. We regularly post articles about what we do on the Dashlane Blog. Learn more about software engineering at Dashlane Note: The Dashlane Authenticator mobile apps integrate with our Dashlane Password Manager apps, allow easy access to TOTP codes while at the same time linking them to credentials in Dashlane. How zero-knowledge is ensured for SSO login. The use of public-key cryptography for sharing items. How 2FA is used to protect account access. Many of the technical details of our product can be found in our white paper here: We have also developed a CLI version of Dashlane, while not officially supported it is created by us at Dashlane. In our public repositories you will find the source code for our mobile apps. We are the creators of the Dashlane Password Manager. In February 2023 we announced that our mobile app source code is publicly available! Read about it here! 🎉 Dashlane: Under the Hood 🛠️