No. Password managers are applicable beyond browser & android environments. Beyond that, other products provide features & UX that may be preferred, and some companies require a specific password manager (and forbid the use of Google's offerings).
To add. The password management space is vast. And 1password seems healthy in it's finances. So I see no reason for it to get killed off.
Password managers existed in browser's and on apple products for a long while now. The problem is that they tie you to an ecosystem and if you're not allllllll bought in, you can't use it oast your phone for example.
It's paywalled, but that is last year's data. I think the straw that broke the camel's back for many people is December 2022, on the Thursday before Christmas. On a personal angle, I tried renewing LastPass personal this year, payment failed, so I switched to another.
I don't expect them to lose much ground though. Something like a password manager will have some very strong lock in inertia, but it's telling that people actually take the effort to move away from it.
Here’s the major flaw. With iCloud Keychain Or Chrome it assumes that platform as central to everything you do. All it takes is one exception to be really annoying. For example I don’t use chrome on my iPhone. I don’t use safari on my work laptop. Etc.
If you can get access, the access outside the core platforms are afterthoughts. Such as iCloud keychains chrome plugin.
Apps like 1password don’t favor one platform over another. There isn’t a conflict of interest for which platforms will be supported.
No. I don't want to get locked out of my password manager by some algorithmic mistake (like has happened to some users that have their Google accounts locked).
I think individual password management might be a slowly dying business as these features will be baked into OSes and browsers, but there's probably room in the marketplace for password management features that work with organizations in the exact way they want it to.
Mega-corporations will probably have unique authentication and authorization requirements in the future that work in specific ways that individual password managers can't cope with.
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[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 55.9 ms ] threadPassword managers existed in browser's and on apple products for a long while now. The problem is that they tie you to an ecosystem and if you're not allllllll bought in, you can't use it oast your phone for example.
Chrome and Firefox extension aren’t as seamlesss but pretty smooth. This means can use 1Password where could never use Google or Apple.
It is the market leader, multiple times larger than the runner up. [1]
(But this is HN.... Facts shouldn't get in the way of a good story!)
[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/1331322/password-managem...
I don't expect them to lose much ground though. Something like a password manager will have some very strong lock in inertia, but it's telling that people actually take the effort to move away from it.
If you can get access, the access outside the core platforms are afterthoughts. Such as iCloud keychains chrome plugin.
Apps like 1password don’t favor one platform over another. There isn’t a conflict of interest for which platforms will be supported.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1331322/password-managem...
Useless link
Basically last pass has ~20% market share where as everything else is less than 5
The other user didn't get the paywall because Statista isn't showing it to people who enter the site from Google.
Mega-corporations will probably have unique authentication and authorization requirements in the future that work in specific ways that individual password managers can't cope with.