Home | Uncategorized | Firefox’s password manager gets smarter
-->

Firefox’s password manager gets smarter

Published: September 1st, 2007
  •  Print

You enter the user name and password to log on a web service. Firefox asks you if you want to save your credential and you accept. Then you realize you mistyped your username or password but now Firefox has saved it and you will have to either select the correct one from a list every time you access the same web site (if you are lazy) or will have to manually delete the wrong credential (press the down button in the user name field, select the value you want to delete and pres Shift + Delete).

This wouldn’t have happened if Firefox offered to remember a password after the log on attempt so you can more properly decide if the credential is valid and you want to save it or not. And that’s what Firefox 3 will do starting from the latest development release (nightly): after a log on attempt, the information bar is prompted asking if you want to remember the password.

Remember password in Firefox 3

It is not smart enough to detect if the logon was successful but it will certainly help to less cluttered and efficient credential lists.

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

9 Comments on “Firefox’s password manager gets smarter”

Subscribe to this post's RSS feed

  1. 1. Karthik Kastury
    September 2nd, 2007 at 1:20 am

    this is a great feature. I am looking forward to this. it would be nice if managing the passwords was also easier than it is right now ..

    [Reply]

  2. 2. Cameron
    September 3rd, 2007 at 12:48 am

    This is GREAT news! :D

    [Reply]

  3. 3. Peter C. LaBudde
    January 19th, 2008 at 6:26 pm

    I would like to remove a remembered password from popping up.. entirely. How do I do that?
    Pete

    [Reply]

  4. 4. Percy Cabello
    January 21st, 2008 at 10:17 am

    Pete, in the Tools menu select Options. Change to the security page and press the Show Passwords button. Then look for the site the password is saved for and delete it.

    [Reply]

  5. 5. James Joseph
    April 25th, 2008 at 10:40 am

    Excellent news! Looking forward for this

    [Reply]

  6. 6. Jinal
    July 12th, 2008 at 12:35 am

    Hello,
    This new feature is really good. I face problem due to this. Problem is , password manager view at top of browser reduced clientwidth and height . So it create problem as in my site all content at fixed location by setting div position. due to this it sometime scrollbar displayed. Can i customize this feature ?

    Wait for your response.

    Thanks,
    Jinal Patel.

    [Reply]

    ThomasJuly 31st, 2008 at 7:17 am

    We have a somewhat similar problem with that drop-down animation here.

    We use Firefox on server machines with “small” on-board graphics cards and with remote sessions a lot.

    So the up/down animation of that bar pushing the entire window content down and up again causes much more interruption than the quicker pop-up window ever did.

    What would be better from our perspective would be to push the bar “over” the page content as some sort of overlay, not pushing the page content down and up. Preferably with the option to disable the animation itself, so that it is just switched on/off, not animated.

    [Reply]

  7. 7. Bill
    July 31st, 2008 at 4:14 pm

    The password manager is far too sensitive. We have a web-based application with admin features to manage user records. These user records contain masked and/or password fields. Each time an administrator has to edit a record, they have to contend with the prompt to remember the password - and if this is someone’s JOB, then this becomes an extremely significant annoyance. And no company should be expected to have to put up with the inconvenience (time = money) of having to respond to customers and to educate them about how to turn the feature off - especially if they use the feature to actually log into places. Apparently, FireFox 3 triggers its password manager on ANY page that has ANY input field of type=”password” on it, regardless of whether it is actually a password or not, and regardless of whether the page is actually a login form. There really needs to be an appropriate way to signal the password manager to do its thing.
    Come on, Mozilla - put some thought into this!

    [Reply]

    emarellAugust 24th, 2008 at 2:36 pm

    I run Firefox 3.0.1 on Vista 32 bit. As in individual at-home user, I experience the opposite compared with Bill (above). The Password Manager simply doesn’t engage on certain pages where I wish it would. Doesn;t seem to be related to whether or not it’s an https address. When it does recognize that I just entered a userID and a password, its way of functioning is OK with me. I don’t much mind the new dropdown animation although, expecting the more obvious popup, it was some time before I noticed it. But about half the time, no dropdown ever appears. Annoying! I wish I knew of a way - maybe an addon toolbar button - that basically would force Password Manager to consider a particular page to be one that gets the stored-password treatment. I’d settle for an “Add URL” option inside the inner sanctum of the “Saved Passwords” dialog boxes, unwieldy as that may be. I’ve looked and looked - have I missed it? Seems to me there’s some kind of forms-filling feature (not encrypted I guess, but…) but I can’t locate that either.

    [Reply]

4 Trackbacks/Pings (Trackback URL)

  1. 1. Firefox’s Password Manager Gets Smarter | dailyApps September 2nd, 2007 at 12:48 am
  2. 2. Firefox 3 Improves Password Saving - CyberNet News September 3rd, 2007 at 11:23 am
  3. 3. Improved Password Saving in Firefox 3 September 3rd, 2007 at 2:37 pm
  4. 4. Firefox 3 Alpha 8 review : Mozilla Links September 20th, 2007 at 2:23 pm

Leave a Reply




Comment:

Firefox 3

Links

Recent Entries

Recent Comments