

Was moved to trash on July 25th (it does not make sense, but could be date on which i made restore on my new android device)

was uploaded(not created!) to google drive on July 25th (It does not make sense, because I have using this file for couple of years).The July 25th could be a date when I port my data. In July I bought my Samsung S7 mobile phone and i move all my apps and data from Nexus 5X to Samsung S7.

So something happend in July?! Somehow keepass2android has used db file from trash.and not the actual file. My actual pavol.kdbx file was uploaded to drive on July 25th. It was created back in 2014 and moved to trash on July 25th and the history says, that this file was modified after move to trash. I have found one entry with name "pavol.kdbx" in trash of my google drive. I have been using this file for couple of years. Ok… maybe I’m just not paranoid enough.It is strange, My DB-name is pavol.kdbx. Well I consider it secure at least unless any of the devices I use is compromised and as long as I trust Android, Keepass, Keepass2Android and Windows. So now I have the mix of security and comfort for my personal needs. I just open the File from the Google Drive folder using Keypass – syncing works quite nicely in the background without any special treatment.Īs I only have a few devices where I want to access my passwords, setting up the keyfile on that device is not a problem. Keepass2Android (the online version) Note: This app rocks! In case you’re still using KeePassDroid have a look at it….This lets you easily add more random bits to crack in order to open the key file – without having to type an extremely long password. Then I found out that Keepass also supports key files (in addition to the password). It certainly isn’t a simple one – more than 12 characters long and with different character classes – but it’s probably still not completely secure. And besides that it also offered a nice excuse to play with my new Nexus 5 🙂īefore I didn’t want to upload my password db to a cloud service because I didn’t really trust my password. I cannot live my digital life without a password manager anymore – now that I started to use one password per service. I used the time over christmas to setup Keepass to sync across different devices.
