Suggestion - Compromised Websites Section
In the Compromised Websites section (which I assume pulls from haveibeenpwned.com), there are about a dozen sites that are showing for me - a few show as "password already changed", which is great.
However, it seems to assume that I must - and CAN - change the passwords for these other breaches, when in reality, there are other possibilities.
It would be nice to put warnings "to bed" with other options, like:
- "This account has already been deleted, so is now secure by virtue of that"
- "This website is now defunct, so can't change the password"
- "I can't change the password for some other reason"
and so on.
This way, it would be possible to not drown out any new breaches that require attention.
1Password Version: Not Provided
Extension Version: Not Provided
OS Version: Not Provided
Sync Type: Not Provided
Comments
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Can we please have a setting to move these alerts to the bottom or acknowledge and dismiss them? The initial information is great, but not the constant nagging with no apparent way to hide the bright red warning at the top of the general Categories view. Thanks!
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Hi @1b_!
"This account has already been deleted, so is now secure by virtue of that"
"This website is now defunct, so can't change the password"Using a separate Archive vault would help you with this. Many people (myself included) use a vault like this to move old stuff that is not active anymore. This would also mean that alerts for older items would not show up in your main vault. Is this something that would work for you?
"I can't change the password for some other reason"
I don't believe I have ever encountered a case where I am not able to change a password for an account I own. Can you please give us some examples of when this could happen? Thank you!
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This is in iOS, on the iPhone.
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Even when using an Archive to keep old/deleted accounts, sometimes I have reason to browse said archive or “all vaults”. In those scenarios, the compromised websites show up, and it would be great to have a way to mark them as dealt with/not applicable. Sure, it’s completionism but it would help keep things correct and avoid even the smallest chance of missed reference to a compromised account.
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Understood, thank you for sharing a specific scenario with us @bazza_blog :+1:
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