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So when your team shares a 1Password item with an external contractor, or when Marketing shares a login with Finance, you get the same visibility into those shared items that you get with anything else that happens inside 1Password. We know that when it comes to security, visibility is critical. Starting today, you can share virtually anything you have stored in 1Password with anyone. Of course, doing so dramatically increases the risk that that data will be compromised in a breach. Or I could screenshot and send it as an image. Sure, I could copy those items from my 1Password vault and paste them somewhere: in an email, in a chat message.
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What if my in-laws came to visit and needed the Wi-Fi password? (They’re not 1Password customers, but rest assured, I’m working on that.) What if I needed to share a login with a contractor for a temporary project at work? I shared the Netflix login with my kids, I shared secure notes about doctor’s visits and grocery lists with my wife, and I shared all kinds of things with my colleagues to get our work done securely.īut sharing with anyone who doesn’t use 1Password wasn’t as easy. Back then, I often shared items in my 1Password vault with friends and family who also use 1Password. Before I was Chief Product Officer at 1Password, I was a 1Password customer.
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