I exported my password data from he various places it was, mostly web browsers, imported it into spreadsheets and used the information there or somewhere else to re-arrange it into the format Bitwarden wanted. Then I saved it in a suitable format and imported it into Bitwarden.

I exported from norton to csv. I opened the csv with numbers app in mac, and I have tried to edit it to Bitwarden format (csv). I am honestly exhausted, and I do not appreciate saving a very sensitive file over and over again, with saved copies being hidden throughout my computer. Thanks for the help, just frustrated.


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If you have previously imported some or all of passwords into Bitwarden, then importing the .csv file again will create a large number of duplicate entries. To avoid this, you can follow the steps below to purge your Bitwarden vault (which deletes all entries previously stored in the vault):

Norton sent me an email and said I needed to update my password for my accounts because I had not changed them for a long time. I have 7 devices, so I had to log out of all of them so I could sign back in with the new password. First they locked me out OF ALL OF MY DEVICES for 24 hours for what they called, "a cooling period" This is BS. Then when I did get back in and tried to get back on my phone (THE DEVICE I USE THE MOST) it will not let me agree to there privacy policy. IT WILL NOT LET ME IN PASSWORD MANAGER ON MY PHONE AT ALL. I am in America, every single place listed in "Americas" I could HAVE CLICKED on to agree TO THEIR TERMS EXCEPT FOR THE "UNITED STATES", WHICH IS WHERE I LIVE. "UNITED STATES" IS GREYED OUT ON MY PHONE ON THAT PAGE. ALL THOSE COUNTRIES AND LOCATIONS AND THEY MADE IT SO I COULDN'T AGREE AND HAVE WHAT I PAID FOR. . ITS GREYS OUT SO I CAN'T AGREE & I CAN'T GET IN MY PASSWORD MANAGER ON MY PHONE AT ALL. I FINALLY GOT BACK ON MY NORTON 360 ACCOUNT ON MY PHONE BUT STILL I CAN NOT GET INTO MY PASSWORD MANAGER. i UNINSTALLED IT, REINSTALLED IT WITH THE PLAY STORE. I AM JUST SICK OF THIS CRAP. JUST SICK AND TIRED. I MAY BE MOVING ON AFTER YEARS OF USING THIS COMPANY, BECAUSE THIS IS TOO MUCH ANXIETY FOR ME. WHAT IS WRONG WITH NORTON. (ALSO I DID ENABLE MY LOCATION SO THAT IS NOT THE ISSUE.) IF THEY DON'T WANT ME AS CUSTOMER ANY LONGER THEY SHOULD SAY SO. I HAVE A PAID VERSION OF NORTON 360 WITH LIFE LOCK WHICH INCLUDES VPN AND PASSWORD MANAGER. IF YOU ARE NOT GOING TO LET ME BACK IN IT AND REMOVING COMPLETLEY AND REINSTALLING DON'T WORK THEN I DON'T WANT IT ANYWAY.

Three days later and now Norton is asking to save passwords in Brave. In those three days I updated the OS to 12.6.8 and Norton also seems to have had an update. However, NPM still does not suggest passwords in Brave as it does in other browsers.

Hi there - I'm relatively new to Password Manager and had very limited success in getting it to work. I've had access problems, forgotten passwords etc. but last week I thought I had a breakthrough and managed to get it working on my Android phone. I was able to access the password manager using biometric login, generated and saved new passwords for around 12 sites and all was good.

Since then I've accessed password mgr on my laptop and it's all gone wrong. On my laptop I can login and even use my android phone biometric login to open the vault on my laptop. However there's only 1 password stored, none of the ones that I created on my phone.

On my phone I can't access the vault at all. Biometric login fails as does using the same password that's successful on my laptop. I've now got 12 or 13 sites with really secure passwords but I don't know what they. I could access the sites and try and reset them all again but I don;t want to do that until I've sorted out my access problems.

You say you generated and saved abut 12 new logins from your phone. Are you sure you actually saved the logins in Norton Password Manager, NPM? I only ask as it is two separate functions to generate a password for a web login, and then to save the password to NPM.

I currently use Dashlane but since I've signed up to Norton on the Antivirus etc for the next 2 years, thought I'd give the password manager a try out before the Dashlane subscription comes up for renewal. Queries:-

- Exported the passwords from Dashlane - all 349 of them. Imported the password csv into Norton Password and there are 192 of them - is there a maximum number limitation on Norton or what would be a reason why the other 150 ish passwords didn't import. Clearly a pain to manually identify and then key them all.

- Tried importing the Dashlane generated password csv again - now all 192 passwords previously imported have been duplicated - is Norton Password not able to identify duplicates and raise queries with the user? How do you delete 192 duplicate passwords other than individually?

It might miss the point of having a password manager, but it is right on point as far as the purpose of the CVV itself. The CVV is intended as proof that you are in possession of the card so, yes, you actually are supposed to find your card and manually verify the CVV. The thinking is that card numbers are easily stolen, but the CVV would only be known by someone in possession of the physical card. Norton did away with the ability to save the CVV a few years ago and people complained, not without merit, that saving it in a password manager was equivalent to possessing the card. Obviously, the intent and the safest practice would be to only have the CVV on the card itself and saved nowhere else. But, as in all matters of security, there is always a balance between security and convenience and in the case of CVV, most people seem to favor convenience.

Can anyone tell me step by step how I import passwords from Norton Password Manager into Dashlane, I tried exporting as a CSV from Norton and then Importing into Dashlane but it just kept telling me that it could not import.

Norton Password Manager may not have the extensive features offered by some password managers, but it still brings some solid functionalities to the table. For example, it supports advanced 2FA tools, including mobile authenticator apps and USB security keys. That said, it lacks some other features like password sharing between users, a built-in TOTP authenticator, extensive account recovery options, and complex form-filling tools, which many of the top premium password managers offer.

Norton Password Manager is a secure, minimal, and free password manager with some essential features that provide reliable protection. It locks passwords behind virtually unbreakable 256-bit AES encryption, offers unlimited password syncing across devices, password vault auditing, and biometric login for mobile users, and has an automatic password changer.

Norton Password Manager may seem minimalistic compared to its competitors, but it does include important features like advanced 2FA compatibility, in addition to a vault auditing tool, password Autochange feature, and easy biometric login for mobile devices. While it lacks the password sharing and vault organizing tools of 1Password, and the advanced form-filling options of RoboForm, it compensates with its efficiency and ease of use. I never encountered any issues with generating, auto-saving, or auto-filling logins.

Norton also includes advanced two-factor authentication (2FA) tools that add an additional layer to password security. This includes compatibility with mobile authenticator apps, backup codes, and even physical security keys like USB tokens. These 2FA options align Norton Password Manager with its competitors like 1Password. I was pleased to see Norton Password Manager adopting these advanced 2FA measures in its software.

Yes. Norton Password Manager is available as a free mobile download for Android and iOS, and also as a browser extension for Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge. You have to create a free my.norton account to use Norton Password Manager and sync data across devices.

Norton Password Manager is a browser-based free password management app that offers unlimited password storage with passwordless access. It's easy to set up and delivers smooth cross-platform syncing. However, it lacks important features seen in other free password managers, such as secure credential sharing and support for common forms of multi-factor authentication. Bitwarden offers excellent free password management with many features, so it remains our Editors' Choice for free password managers.

You start by downloading the appropriate browser extension and creating or signing into your Norton account. After signing in, Norton offers you a PDF containing the recovery key for your account, requests permission to set Norton as your default password manager, and provides instructions for pinning the password manager to the Chrome bar. Norton's instructions are easy for users to follow.

Confession: We used the same password for our Norton test account and vault. We applaud Norton Password Manager for asking us to change the passwords after logging in. Norton uses a similar alert to let users know when their account password or master password shows up in a breach.

When we test password management apps, we enter fake credentials and fictional data into the form fields, so this is a "do as we say, not as we do" moment. Please don't use the same password to secure your account or password vault.

After changing the master password, Norton sends another prompt to your browser sidebar, encouraging passwordless login adoption for the account. Passwordless vault entry requires biometric authentication (using a fingerprint or a face scan) using your mobile device. The login process is quick and easy. 1Password and Keeper also allow users to log into their vaults using passwordless authentication.

Beyond the passwordless login capability, Norton's standalone password manager does not accept other forms of multi-factor authentication, such as hardware security keys or mobile authenticator apps. Bitwarden allows free users to authenticate their identities using email or an authenticator app, and paid subscribers get additional MFA options, including authentication via a Yubikey or any FIDO U2F-compatible security key. e24fc04721

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