![]() ![]() csv file to whatever tool I switch to and hopefully import everything. Worst case, I'll stay with what I've got and if something composts in Lastpass I can take the. I suspect the chances of Lastpass exploding and killing itself are a LOT lower than that I'll do something stupid, so this method SHOULD enable me to put back whatever entries I manage to delete.īUT, is this the optimal method for recovering Lastpass if I need to? I've read discussions that talk about using the browser extensions and a one-time password, but I don't think I understand exactly what that buys me in terms of recovery.Īnd please don't point me to another Lastpass document - I don't know who does their technical writing, but they're experts at making what should be a simple process as opaque as possible. THOSE are written to an encrypted flash drive (bitlocker encryption) and stored. csv file from Lastpass, open it in Excel, look through it to make sure everything looks OK (as much as possible), then save it as an. I hope NEVER to have to recover, but I'm trying to make sure my backups and recovery tools are valid. I'm probably incorrect, but was there previously a way to export the Lastpass vault in some binary format that wasn't readable but could be imported to recover Lastpass? If not, I'm most likely thinking of Dashlane. ![]()
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