
The software includes emergency access with all individual plans, ensuring that a trusted family member or friend can always access your encrypted information. LastPass goes a few steps further for individuals and businesses, though. Individuals can seamlessly share passwords within teams, and administrators can access security dashboards to monitor access to different account keys. I don't expect quality software to be free, or that someone else's hard work should be uncompensated.īut please be honest about the real costs and let the buyer decide.The two password managers also have some key business features in common. And the reviewers don't need to specify which version their comments apply to.Īlso, I am more than willing to pay for software. MacUpdate allows vendors to post the price of the least expensive alternatives of their software.

Of course, this isn't limited to Dashlane. And the reviews: which version, "Free," "Premium," or "Premium Plus," do the Dashlane reviews pertain to? Surely no one could give a 5-star review to a password manager that manages a max of 50 passwords.

Why MacUpdate lets companies indulge in such deceitful advertising is beyond me. Keychain Access, the password storage function in your browser, or even an Excel spreadsheet should be more than sufficient.įor everyone else, the "Free" Dashlane is just a deceptive come-on, because you'll need, at minimum, the "Premium" version for which you'll pay an annual fee.Īs someone below noted, the price for the "Premium" version is pretty much in line with 1Password's.

It stores "up to 50 passwords." Dear friends, if all you have to manage is 50 passwords, a password manager is way overkill. The crippleware (or "dumb down" if you prefer) version is "free."
