Tools

News

Notícias

Classificados

Cursos

Broker

IPv4:

IPv6:

 

UpOrDown
Ping
MTR
Smokeping
MTU Detect
Portscan
DNS
HTTP/SSL
My IP
IP Calc
IP Extractor
Uptime Monitor

Password managers’ zero-knowledge promises questioned

Image © Arstechnica
New research challenges the zero-knowledge promises of leading password managers, showing that server compromise and recovery settings can expose vault data.

New research challenges the long-standing “zero-knowledge” promises of major password managers, showing that a compromised server or misconfigured account-recovery settings can expose vault data. The study, which analyzed Bitwarden, Dashlane, and LastPass, suggests that even widely used encryption schemes may fall short when attackers gain control of the hosting infrastructure.

Researchers reverse-engineered the three products and found attack paths tied to account recovery and vault-sharing features. In scenarios where accounts are recoverable or vaults are organized into groups, certain protections may be bypassed, potentially allowing vault data to leak despite encryption at rest.

One class of attacks targets how new members join a vault. An attacker who controls the server could substitute their own public keys during enrollment, enabling decryption of sensitive data. Other assaults degrade encryption by downgrading to older, simpler modes or by exploiting the client–server interaction during recovery and key rotation.

Ars Technica notes that the researchers concluded “zero-knowledge” is not an absolute guarantee in practical terms, and vendors responded by stressing the importance of threat modeling, audits, and continuous improvements to recovery workflows and key management.

Experts say the findings urge password-manager developers to harden recovery and group-key flows and to communicate clearly what “zero-knowledge” means in real-world deployments. While the technology remains robust in many settings, the paper highlights that end-to-end encryption cannot assume a perfectly trusted server and that administrator access can introduce real risk.

 

Arstechnica

Notícias relacionadas

Doubao 2.0 impulsiona IA corporativa 2026
ONU: 300 mil vítimas no crime cibernético
Comitê Gestor reconduz presidente interino até março
Agronegócio acelera cibersegurança após perdas
Brasil mira IA e data centers na Índia
Oi: Justiça do RJ arresta créditos ex-acionistas

O ISP.Tools sobrevive graças aos anúncios.

Considere desativar seu bloqueador de anúncios.
Prometemos não ser intrusivos.

Consentimento para cookies

Utilizamos cookies para melhorar a sua experiência no nosso site.

Ao utilizar o nosso site, você concorda com o uso de cookies. Saiba mais