

In addition to providing enterprise-grade password management, SAASPASS allows corporations to secure access to websites, services and accounts with multi-factor authentication. It is available on a freemium basis ( pricing listed here).

The new services would also need to work seamlessly with Dropbox’s current system and work within its user interface, which remains somewhat outdated and clunky.The SAASPASS enterprise password manager can be used in the corporate environment. Not the first timeĭropbox should be able to make a password manager and vault application work given that others have already done so using Dropbox as their back-end, but that doesn’t mean that people will shift allegiances.Ĭompanies like 1Password and LastPass have a loyal following and have worked hard on incrementally improving their products for years, so Dropbox has an uphill battle. When pushed on the huge leap in AI that Dropbox must have secretly achieved to make this Utopian future possible however, Houston repeatedly demurred into Silicon Valley vagueisms. It is a more pragmatic and realistic approach to the one that Dropbox CEO Drew Houston outlined last year where he tried to persuade El Reg that the company would soon be able to pull in every individual’s emails, Slack messages, and another other incoming information and magically sort through it, giving people only the most important stuff. And these services are a natural fit for Dropbox, especially since third-parties like 1Password have been using the cloud-storage outfit precisely for this sort of service. The new services are not a huge surprise given the business's gobbling up of firms that do exactly the same job as the stuff it's now rolling out. oh and harvesting email addresses, too READ MORE
