Critiques pour LastPass Password Manager
LastPass Password Manager par LastPass
Avis de Electric Bacon
Noté 1 sur 5
par Electric Bacon, il y a 4 ansAfter LastPass had some of its free features locked behind a paywall, I was no longer able to use it to suit my needs. The new business practices are too aggressive, and they pushed me away. LogMeIn lost its chance at converting me into a paid user.
The monthly cost is outrageously high — it's laughable. LastPass is only worth about $5, at best, but only as a one-time fee — certainly not a subscription.
If LogMeIn wants to provide a service, it would be reasonable to pay a subscription fee. As far as I'm concerned, LastPass is a product, not a service. Paying a subscription fee to unlock features that were once free feels like highway robbery. Instead of providing new features or improving the existing product, LogMeIn artificially devalued LastPass just to resell it at a premium. It's a slap to the face of loyal users.
Restricting the use of LastPass to a single platform (desktop or mobile) is another major weak point. It's impractical to only use one or the other. Restricting the user's platform does more to harm their security than it does to help it. All of my passwords were generated by LastPass, and all of them are too long and complicated to remember. If a user can't afford the premium fee, their only other choice is to change their account passwords (on the other platform) to something shorter and easier to remember. Is LogMeIn trying to encourage free users to use weak, less-secure passwords? It sure looks like it. This business move is remarkably brazen and reckless. It's insulting.
Does LogMeIn regard long-time LastPass users as a flock of simpletons? How much of an imbecile do they think we are? LogMeIn's new business decisions reek of corporate greed. I, for one, refuse to be taken advantage of. LastPass is not the only option available. There are comparable products out there, with the same functionality (or better), which can be had at no cost. I'm going to follow the thousands of other users — that LogMeIn ran away — to a different product, run by a company that isn't so shortsighted.
It was good while it lasted, but it was a catastrophic disappointment thereafter. Farewell, LastPass. I'm off to the greener pastures of Bitwarden and KeePass.
The monthly cost is outrageously high — it's laughable. LastPass is only worth about $5, at best, but only as a one-time fee — certainly not a subscription.
If LogMeIn wants to provide a service, it would be reasonable to pay a subscription fee. As far as I'm concerned, LastPass is a product, not a service. Paying a subscription fee to unlock features that were once free feels like highway robbery. Instead of providing new features or improving the existing product, LogMeIn artificially devalued LastPass just to resell it at a premium. It's a slap to the face of loyal users.
Restricting the use of LastPass to a single platform (desktop or mobile) is another major weak point. It's impractical to only use one or the other. Restricting the user's platform does more to harm their security than it does to help it. All of my passwords were generated by LastPass, and all of them are too long and complicated to remember. If a user can't afford the premium fee, their only other choice is to change their account passwords (on the other platform) to something shorter and easier to remember. Is LogMeIn trying to encourage free users to use weak, less-secure passwords? It sure looks like it. This business move is remarkably brazen and reckless. It's insulting.
Does LogMeIn regard long-time LastPass users as a flock of simpletons? How much of an imbecile do they think we are? LogMeIn's new business decisions reek of corporate greed. I, for one, refuse to be taken advantage of. LastPass is not the only option available. There are comparable products out there, with the same functionality (or better), which can be had at no cost. I'm going to follow the thousands of other users — that LogMeIn ran away — to a different product, run by a company that isn't so shortsighted.
It was good while it lasted, but it was a catastrophic disappointment thereafter. Farewell, LastPass. I'm off to the greener pastures of Bitwarden and KeePass.
8 914 notes
- Noté 2 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 18764059 de Firefox, il y a 8 jours
- Noté 3 sur 5par EcceNux, il y a 8 joursSadly, the new versions are broken. The last working version is 4.138.3 (from January 2025). I hope LP takes care of the problems. Thankfully, the downgraded version works fine :)
- Noté 4 sur 5par Denis, il y a 8 jours
- Noté 1 sur 5par theTinker, il y a 9 jours
- Noté 1 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 16029745 de Firefox, il y a 10 joursSo a fun thing that happens with LastPass is that a) it forces sites to reload and frequently breaks login pages, so that I have to disable the extension to log into my bank (for example). It also breaks its own site, so that I can't access my vault without reinstalling the extension and clearing my cookies/cache. Which WERE just annoying, but when I had the audacity to change my phone number meant that I couldn't access my vault to update it, then couldn't use the extension at all (because I couldn't do the 2FA). Support has been actively making it worse and asking for proof of account ownership that's either a) impossible (receipt for payment), b) deeply insecure and exploitable (a photo of my face + my ID by email), or c) frankly insane (enterprise/federal-level identity verification services). Heads up: do NOT send a photo of your face with your legal identification by email unless you REALLY want your identity stolen!
- Noté 2 sur 5par Rz, il y a 11 joursI personally didn't experience too many problems using LP for years. Although the forced-sign outs every so often + not being able to sign in on more than one device at a time was a big inconvenience. After all the security concerns, I decided to delete my account and switch password-managers.
- Noté 1 sur 5par JCN, il y a 11 jours
- Noté 5 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 19145409 de Firefox, il y a 14 jours
- Noté 4 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 19094018 de Firefox, il y a 15 jours
- Noté 4 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 17311352 de Firefox, il y a 15 jours
- Noté 5 sur 5par LawDog, il y a 19 jours
- Noté 1 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 19127907 de Firefox, il y a 20 joursDo a search on "LastPass breaches" to see the problem. Put simply, LastPass has demonstrated that its security infrastructure — both software and DevOps — is not robust enough to warrant trust.
Moreover, its management appears substantially more interested in minimising negative publicity than ensuring client safety. In short, LastPass cannot and should not be entrusted with your passwords. I used them for over a decade, but have now moved to the open-source BitWarden.
It was a suprisingly smooth transfer, apart from having to change all the passwords that LastPass's breaches compromised. - Noté 5 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 14629144 de Firefox, il y a 21 jours
- Noté 5 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 14123202 de Firefox, il y a 22 jours
- Noté 5 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 15564935 de Firefox, il y a 23 jours
- Noté 4 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 19116058 de Firefox, il y a 24 jours
- Noté 5 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 13603694 de Firefox, il y a un mois
- Noté 5 sur 5par dischell, il y a un mois
- Noté 4 sur 5par Connie Salo, il y a un mois
- Noté 4 sur 5par SAM HINDI, il y a un mois
- Noté 2 sur 5par dduran1210, il y a un mois
- Noté 5 sur 5par Utilisateur ou utilisatrice 18471352 de Firefox, il y a un mois
- Noté 1 sur 5par Tim Harrap, il y a un mois
- Noté 4 sur 5par thane, il y a un mois