You might see that the Dropbox Community team have been busy working on some major updates to the Community itself! So, here is some info on what’s changed, what’s staying the same and what you can expect from the Dropbox Community overall.
Dropbox Passwords
285 TopicsPrevent Dropbox Passwords from saving passwords for certain sites
Is it possible to not save passwords for specific sites? When I connect to work, I need to use a one time password that changes each time. There is no reason to save this password. Is there a way to specify sites that will not have their passwords saved?5.6KViews9likes16CommentsFEATURE REQUEST: Dropbox Password - Organize Passwords by Tag or Folders
I've used another service to store my Passwords for the past few years and I intend to transition to Dropbox Password as it is on the cloud and I am a Plus member already. My problem is that I have too many passwords stored and I need to sort them in some sort of Folderish or Tag way, for example, passwords for "Gaming" purposes, "Work" related, "Bank" services, etc. I even have multiple accounts for the same service, such as multiple emails (Work and Personal). It's just too hard to search them if they are all together. That's how they are stored right now on my current service. Also this service only allows to export passwords as XML and not CSV. It is a pretty common free password storing tool for Mac. Thanks in advance for considering my idea, and I'm sorry if it has already been suggested. Please upvote my idea if you think this makes sense as a priority feature. 🙂2.1KViews8likes5CommentsHow do YOU access Dropbox?
Hi Dropbox community - I'm a design researcher here at Dropbox. I'm curious about how you access Dropbox! How do you access Dropbox: the website,the desktop app (for mac/windows), and/or the mobile app (iOS, android)? For those you use, why do you use them? For those you don't, why not? Is there anything you wish you could do on one that you can't today? Why?9.5KViews6likes11CommentsHow to import your passwords to Dropbox Passwords from other password managers
You might have heard about Dropbox Passwords, (and if you haven’t, you can learn all about it here) but what if you already use a password management tool? We have good news, it’s simple to import your passwords from another tool. Follow the steps below to import your already saved passwords from LastPass, Dashlane, 1Password and other password tools. Import from LastPass Sign into LastPass.com or LastPass browser extension Click Advanced Options on the sidebar Select Export under Manage Your Account Enter your LastPass master password If you’ve signed into LastPass.com on web, you will see your passwords data on a new Tab. Copy the content and save it to a file. You can name it <name>.csv If you’ve signed into the browser extension, you will see a lastpass_export.csv automatically downloaded From your Dropbox Passwords app, click Add button under your avatar, select Import from…, select Passwords Manager and select the csv file from step 4 Delete the file from step 4 for safety reasons Import from Dashlane Launch Dashlane and log in to your account Select File > Export > Unsecured archive (readable) in CSV format Enter your Master Password (if required) Save the file in a safe place From your Dropbox Passwords app, click Add button under your avatar, select Import from…, select Passwords Manager and select the csv file from step 4 Delete the file from step 4 for safety reasons Import from 1Password Open and unlock 1Password. Select the vault you want to export. It’s not possible to export from “All Vaults”, so you’ll need to switch to a specific vault. Choose File > Export > All Items. If you belong to a team account, there may be some vaults where you don’t have the “Export items” permission. Ask your team administrator. Enter your Master Password. Choose a location to save your export to (such as your desktop), choose File format: “Comma Delimited Text (.CSV)” , “All Fields” , “Include Column Labels”, Click “Save” From your Dropbox Passwords app, click Add button under your avatar, select Import from…, select Passwords Manager and select the csv file from step 5 Delete the file from step 5 for safety reasons Import from other Password Managers find the option from other Passwords managers to export items to a CSV From your Dropbox Passwords app, click Add button under your avatar, select Import from…, select Passwords Manager and select the csv file from step 1 Delete the file from step 1 for safety reasons Now that you can transfer your passwords over with just a few clicks, it’s the perfect time to get set up with Dropbox Passwords and leave the dreaded ‘forgot password?’ button in the past.22KViews4likes3CommentsHow to Remove Passwords App and Vaults?
Hi, I clicked ok when Dropbox suggested I download both of these. I now realise I need neither of them, and they clutter up my Dropbox folders and cannot be moved. How to uninstall/unlink/unsubscribe please? I’ve asked Dropbox support on twitter but they have been no help, just asking me to send more and more of my private information, which sounds suspect. Thanks, Rory4.8KViews4likes13CommentsPassword changes creating new account
I’m here in the newbies group because I don’t use Dropbox much, nor do I understand what I’m doing when I have files stored there. I’ve been asked to change my password at login, when I’m using the stored password. Frustrating!. Yesterday, after changing my password (to the one it won’t accept today), a new account with no files was created!!!. Are the files that were there seconds before gone forever?2.5KViews3likes4Comments