1Password Unified Access
1PasswordReviews from AWS customer
0 AWS reviews
-
5 star0
-
4 star0
-
3 star0
-
2 star0
-
1 star0
External reviews
1,747 reviews
from
External reviews are not included in the AWS star rating for the product.
One of the most important apps I own, and worth every penny
What do you like best about the product?
1Password is the reigning king of all password management programs. I've been using it for about 12 years, I think, and I've never once regretted it. It makes it brain-dead easy to be ridiculously secure. (And I've heard many security researchers use it and recommend it. These are the people that know.)
It not only helps you make excellent, nigh-uncrackable passwords for all your new accounts, but it makes sure you realize which of your existing passwords is too weak, and it'll alert you when a password of yours is the same across multiple sites, because that makes those accounts more vulnerable.
Via its Watchtower feature, it even tells you if any of your sites with logins have been compromised, prompting you to go and update your password in case your login was leaked. It does that by comparing the date of that password's last change to the date on which the account could have been compromised, so if you updated since then, you know you don't need to worry. One excellent feature that is hard to get any other way: occasionally you need to share an account with multiple people, and all share the same "second factor" automatically randomizing numeric code. Without something like 1Password in place, it would be nearly impossible to do. 1Password makes it easy.
I honestly can't imagine what more they could do to help me, truth be told. They've taken it so far already. It's clear that the people at 1Password are super smart, knowledgable experts in their field who are building a product they want to use and that they can trust. So I do too.
It not only helps you make excellent, nigh-uncrackable passwords for all your new accounts, but it makes sure you realize which of your existing passwords is too weak, and it'll alert you when a password of yours is the same across multiple sites, because that makes those accounts more vulnerable.
Via its Watchtower feature, it even tells you if any of your sites with logins have been compromised, prompting you to go and update your password in case your login was leaked. It does that by comparing the date of that password's last change to the date on which the account could have been compromised, so if you updated since then, you know you don't need to worry. One excellent feature that is hard to get any other way: occasionally you need to share an account with multiple people, and all share the same "second factor" automatically randomizing numeric code. Without something like 1Password in place, it would be nearly impossible to do. 1Password makes it easy.
I honestly can't imagine what more they could do to help me, truth be told. They've taken it so far already. It's clear that the people at 1Password are super smart, knowledgable experts in their field who are building a product they want to use and that they can trust. So I do too.
What do you dislike about the product?
Every once in awhile I'll experience a weird little user experience glitch. A password isn't filled in automatically when it should have been. It doesn't offer to save a password when it should have. None of these are security issues, they're just mildly annoying.I figure all software has bugs. If that's the kind 1Password has, I'll grin and bear it given all the pluses it has.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Security, security, security. Organizations so often (usually?) just verbally share crappy passwords across a dozen accounts, using the same easy-to-remember password all over the place, and it's memorized by two or three dozen people. That's easy, but it's extremely, laughably insecure. Like, scary levels of insecure. 1Password allows organizations to fix that without having to take on the pain that proper security would otherwise be. It solves the paradox that if you can memorize a password, it's inherently insecure. Ideally, every account should have a 12+ character password, and a different one on each account. There's no practical way to do that without something like 1Password.
Continues to be the best balance between security and ease-of-use.
What do you like best about the product?
I've been using 1Password for over 10 years and it has always been quick to adopt new features and capabilities of OSes and devices. As a Mac and iOS user primarily, their apps are top-notch. They also have always been transparent and well-informed regarding their security methodologies. Even as they continue to evolve, they've been very forthcoming with previous shortcomings. It's this honesty and quality that engenders trust from their user base.
What do you dislike about the product?
There continues to be a lot of confusion in our organization between the "classic" 1Password browser extensions and the newer "1Password X" extensions. Personally, I prefer the classic approach which requires installing the full desktop app. I find those extensions to be more reliable and easier to support as an admin. The "X" extensions work, but are different enough that I have to adjust how I support my end users who install them.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
While the name and core functionality is focused on passwords, 1Password works very well as a general-purpose encryption tool - especially for sharing encrypted information. Limiting that data to just passwords means you are severely undervaluing the 1Password feature set.
Recommendations to others considering the product:
If enrolling a team, consider educating them on the risks of weak security. Adopting a tool like 1Password requires a bit of emotional buy-in, since it does require a bit of effort on the part of the end user. We did a 1-hour seminar on recent security risks, both in general and specifically affecting the company, and it helped drive the point home.
The secure pass and document software I didnt know I needed
What do you like best about the product?
Sharing of or personal-options for passes and documents, easy-sign in access while in browser or app, and generally secure ease
What do you dislike about the product?
long password can be cumbersome to type on iOS device when faceID fails to auth into 1Pass
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
shared stored docs and passwords amongst family
Used to be better than lastpass
What do you like best about the product?
Vault sharing combined with being able to generate OTP codes are the best feature.
What do you dislike about the product?
The android app sucks; half the time it doesn't prompt to autofill. They also introduces a lot of issues in version 7 on OSX (not sure about windows). Autofill sometimes doesn't work, the COPY button next to the OTP code seems to not work half the time and some button placements make no sense.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Secure logins with a long random password per account
Getting better and better
What do you like best about the product?
Ability to add passwords directly from the browser.
Filling out credit card information.
Watchtower service.
Ease of moving items through the app to other vaults.
Filling out credit card information.
Watchtower service.
Ease of moving items through the app to other vaults.
What do you dislike about the product?
The web interface is clunky and no option to create mfa tokens.
Have to use the apps to get the benefits.
Missing ability to share a password with someone for a short period of time.
Have to use the apps to get the benefits.
Missing ability to share a password with someone for a short period of time.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
All my passwords were very similar, now they are random.
Sharing passwords with my team is easy.
Sharing passwords with my team is easy.
Recommendations to others considering the product:
The product has advanced during the time I've been using it.
They listen to requests and implement them in a timely fashion.
The security of the product is high and the fact that the vault is stored locally helps me sleep at night.
They listen to requests and implement them in a timely fashion.
The security of the product is high and the fact that the vault is stored locally helps me sleep at night.
(Was) best in class!
What do you like best about the product?
1Password is so easy robuste and has a strong focus on security and privacy
What do you dislike about the product?
Early adopters aren't looked after as much as we should be. Our pricing seems higher than people signing up today, and it's cumbersome to migrate from the original US region to one of the other regions. Also the Electron rebuild is worse than before.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
1Password lets us effectively share credentials in our company. It's super easy to get started regardless of platform and previous experience with "Password Managers". However the new plugin and electron app is worse than before.
Best Password Solution I have Found
What do you like best about the product?
The overall full-feature set meets my family's needs well.
What do you dislike about the product?
Lately, the chrome extension is acting weird and doesn't seem as connected with the desktop app as it used to. Minor annoyance.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
It is like a 360 degree solution for all things important and requiring safe keeping. From passwords, credit cards, passports, identities. I have family account and both kids are using it in their own personal areas. I use it mostly for personal use but I have setup a vault for work projects and I have found that to be very useful.
Overall pretty good, storing my passwords. But I really can't bare the speed
What do you like best about the product?
It has the most features, handle security of my passwords well.
What do you dislike about the product?
When I hit short cut to open a window to fill in some passwords, it just takes forever.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Keep my passwords in one place with a stronger password I never use elsewhere
Great for multi-tasking multiple accounts
What do you like best about the product?
multi-account feature - being able to use 1password for both work and home.
What do you dislike about the product?
no way to edit web form details - some websites have extra fields that are needed during login.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
keeping all account logins across multiple platforms organized. increased efficiency
It's my go-to
What do you like best about the product?
1Password is reliable and easy to use, and it syncs seamlessly across all my devices. I like the confidence that the product gives me; I never need to worry about losing a password. I also love the ability to generate passwords or pass-phrases. The browser integration works really well too, as does the iOS integration.
What do you dislike about the product?
It would be nice to have a random username generator like that offered by LastPass. Of course, you can always use the free LastPass username generator on the web, so there's that...
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Reuse of passwords was a huge problem for me and my partner. Now that is no longer an issue as we are using random passwords/pass-phrases generated using 1Password. This has significantly reduced our attack surface, which gets better every time we update an old password with a new one. Knowing that we are unlikely to lose a password again is great!
Recommendations to others considering the product:
If you're looking for a solid, reliable, easy-to-use password manager for macOS, look no further. Since we started using 1Password we no longer need to worry about losing passwords or reusing them. If you are not already using a password manager, you should be. It's not a question of IF you will be part of a breach, it's when. In fact, it's probably already happened.
showing 1,181 - 1,190