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Last year, I ran across this password manager at http://codecanyon.net/item/password-manager/2145518 but I haven't gotten around to try to install it yet.

Regards,
Alisak.

Alisak Sanavongsay  Digital Assets Programmer  http://library.ucmerced.edu  209.201.9073  [log in to unmask]



On Mar 5, 2013, at 10:35 AM, Joe Hourcle <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> On Mar 5, 2013, at 8:29 AM, Adam Constabaris wrote:
> 
>> An option is to use a password management program (KeepassX is good because
>> it is cross platform) to store the passwords on the shared drive, although
>> of course you need to distribute the passphrase for it around.
> 
> So years ago, when I worked for a university, they wanted us to put all of the root passwords into an envelope, and give them to management to hold.  (we were a Solaris shop, so there actually were root passwords on the boxes, but you had to connect from the console or su to be able to use 'em).
> 
> We managed to drag our heels on it, and management forgot about it*, but I had an idea ...
> 
> What if there were a way to store the passwords similar to the secret formula in Knight Rider?
> 
> Yes, I know, it's an obscure geeky reference, and probably dates me.  The story went that the secret bullet-proof spray on coating wasn't held by any one person; there were three people who each knew part of the formula, and that any two of them had enough knowledge to make it.
> 
> For needing 2 of 3 people, the process is simple -- divide it up into 3 parts, and each person has a different missing bit.  This doesn't work for 4 people, though (either needing 2 people, or 3 people to complete it).
> 
> You could probably do it for two or three classes of people (eg, you need 1 sysadmin + 1 manager to unlock it), but I'm not sure if there's some method to get an arbitrary "X of Y" people required to unlock.
> 
> If anyone has ideas, send 'em to be off-list.  (If other people want the answer, I can aggregate / summarize the results, so I don't end up starting yet another inappropriate out-of-control thread)
> 
> ...
> 
> Oh, and I was assuming that you'd be using PGP, using the public key to encrypt the passwords, so that anyone could insert / update a password into whatever drop box you had; it'd only be taking stuff out that would require multiple people to combine efforts.
> 
> -Joe
> 
> 
> * or at least, they didn't bring it up again while I was still employed there.
>