I really hope I'm wrong about this and just being fouled by my ignorance.
So this is my issue: I believe that our browser's usernames and passwords (from Firefox, Chrome, Chromium, whatever) are not encrypted (or are unprotected) by default, and I say that because I can just access those usernames and passwords from other applications, in example importing data from another browser. And probably less than 0.1 per cent of the users end up encrypting their browser's passwords in the browser at any given time. The remaining 99.9 per cent of the users remain using a non-protected key chain.
With this is mind, what is stopping any application with bad intentions from just searching for Firefox's and Chrome's and other browser's folders and from fetching all that sensitive data?
What crossed my mind was that any application that accesses the home folder (Linux operating systems speaking) can easily get all our credentials for everything we use and do on the internet. That got me worried.
I'm really afraid that it could be simpler than simple for anyone with bad intentions to use this 'bug' to steal others' information. Our bank account details, our credit card details and whatever could be stolen...
So am I wrong and it ain't that simple for someone (using an installed application) to get our private data or... am I right and this is a problem that can be explored at any time?
So this is my issue: I believe that our browser's usernames and passwords (from Firefox, Chrome, Chromium, whatever) are not encrypted (or are unprotected) by default, and I say that because I can just access those usernames and passwords from other applications, in example importing data from another browser. And probably less than 0.1 per cent of the users end up encrypting their browser's passwords in the browser at any given time. The remaining 99.9 per cent of the users remain using a non-protected key chain.
With this is mind, what is stopping any application with bad intentions from just searching for Firefox's and Chrome's and other browser's folders and from fetching all that sensitive data?
What crossed my mind was that any application that accesses the home folder (Linux operating systems speaking) can easily get all our credentials for everything we use and do on the internet. That got me worried.
I'm really afraid that it could be simpler than simple for anyone with bad intentions to use this 'bug' to steal others' information. Our bank account details, our credit card details and whatever could be stolen...
So am I wrong and it ain't that simple for someone (using an installed application) to get our private data or... am I right and this is a problem that can be explored at any time?
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