

- 1PASSWORD STANDALONE LICENSE VERSUS SUBSCRIPTION FULL
- 1PASSWORD STANDALONE LICENSE VERSUS SUBSCRIPTION PASSWORD
My concern here is that I don’t want to rely on the security practices of the people I’m sharing with to protect these particular passwords. I have an opportunity to reject access within a certain time frame (configurable). Guest vaults with auditing are a step in the right direction, but I’d love to see time delayed access. It’d be nice to give my family and employees access to certain accounts as well. Many of my clients are required (by law) to provide access to their business records in case of their death. I will take the opportunity to push a few requests (that I know you’ve heard before … from me): And today, I will be meeting with a non-profit board to convince them to get on board.

The attention to detail and subtle improvements to UX have been really well received. I’m rushing to move these same clients over to 1Password before the Teams promo ends. Quite often, I’ve learned that they’ve hit enough obstacles that they don’t even trust the tool and keep reusing the same weak passwords all over the web so that they can remember what they need. While these solutions are simple enough that my clients can make them work, they don’t enjoy using them. Due to their robust support for teams, Dashlane and Lastpass have been the most deployed.

1PASSWORD STANDALONE LICENSE VERSUS SUBSCRIPTION PASSWORD
Since 1Password hasn’t had much support for teams and password sharing (e.g., for super admin or disaster scenarios), I have continued to support multiple managers across my clients. I appreciate the direction you are heading, and I was more than willing to pay a recurring fee given how much the pace of development has picked up. How much value do you extract from the stuff you store in 1Password? Is it really that unreasonable for a company to move toward more recurring revenue? It’s a really weird opinion here, of all places, the “let’s build a hypergrowth SaaS” home of the Web.Īs a long time user across platforms who has continued to pay for upgrades and has now licensed a Team and Family. I’m not even a fan, it’s just been apparent to me for a long time.Īgain, this is $36 per year. I think the people extremely upset about this, including you, are the ones being disingenuous and forgetting how reasonable AgileBits is in everything else they do. I’ll drive this point home: I actually got the standalone licenses cheaper through work way back when and still happily entered into paying for a subscription from my own funds. I used to do the standalone Dropbox thing too and the subscription is just night and day better, and given the value I extract from this product I’m not going to freak out over half a coffee a month nor accuse AgileBits, a company I’ve tremendously respected for many years with their attention to support and customer experience, with suddenly being the axis of evil as you’ve done here. If you said something like that to me in person we’d have a serious problem because at the end if the day, integrity is all anybody really has.Īnyway, completely happy subscription user here and it’s actually the reason I went back to 1Password.

I think the explanation is reasonable even if you disagree with it, and the world isn’t a polarity between “company behaviors I agree with” and “shady, insidious, underhanded behavior by a company that deserves basically openly harassing someone who volunteered to talk about it and questioning their integrity and honesty in a comment.” People are too quick to accuse someone of dishonesty these days and I don’t think most realize how serious of a charge that actually is. If anyone has any additional questions or concerns, I would encourage you to contact us directly at Eva Nothing insidious, just an attempt to make it easier for the majority of our customers to locate what they are looking for without confusing them. That is why we have made it a bit harder to locate information about licenses on our site. One of the ongoing issues has been customer confusion between licenses and account. Our subscriptions options remain new and we are still figuring a lot of things out. And given that we are entirely customer funded, those are customers that we cannot and are not ignoring. We know that we have a critical mass of customers who appreciate the ability to store their password data outside of the cloud. However, I’d like to assure you that not only are there no plans to get rid of it, we are continuing to develop the standalone version. I hear and appreciate your collective concerns that we are getting rid of the standalone license option.
1PASSWORD STANDALONE LICENSE VERSUS SUBSCRIPTION FULL
Full disclosure, I work for AgileBits, the folks that make 1Password.
