Made for macOS
Join MAC Vault Academy as we celebrate pole vaulting at any age! There will be speakers starting at 3 pm. Tickets includes a BBQ dinner Friday night and registration for the competition on Saturday. Divisions on Saturday will include Masters Men and Women, High School Girls and Boys (spots limited), and Open Men. Everyone Needs a Password Manager. Forgetting the password for an important website can send.
pwSafe for Mac is an app developed from scratch to run on macOS. This means it looks and feels like the native app it is, providing a better user experience, with no awkward controls or keyboard shortcuts.
It runs beautifully on Retina displays and supports dark mode.
Inside the Browser
pwSafe for Mac includes browser extensions to make it much faster to fill you login details or even to create a new strong password. pwSafe's extensions are designed with security in mind, never exposing your passwords to the browser.
Powerful, yet easy
Star wars battlefront mac download. pwSafe for Mac was designed with sensible defaults to get you started and powerful options just one click away. Some examples:
- Configure how many passwords it keeps on the history.
- Define exactly what characters go in the password for that specific website.
- Chose what fields are visible by default.
Enterprise-Ready
pwSafe uses a standard file format and is compatible with many apps for various platforms.
It also supports the YubiKey, which is a hardware token used by corporations like Google, Microsoft and even the US DOD. The YubiKey serves as a second authentication factor, providing even more security.
Need help?
Please see our FAQ and the user guide. If you have a question, contact us.
Turn on and set up FileVault
FileVault 2 is available in OS X Lion or later. When FileVault is turned on, your Mac always requires that you log in with your account password.
- Choose Apple menu () > System Preferences, then click Security & Privacy.
- Click the FileVault tab.
- Click , then enter an administrator name and password.
- Click Turn On FileVault.
If other users have accounts on your Mac, you might see a message that each user must type in their password before they will be able to unlock the disk. For each user, click the Enable User button and enter the user's password. User accounts that you add after turning on FileVault are automatically enabled.
Choose how you want to be able to unlock your disk and reset your password, in case you ever forget your password:
- If you're using OS X Yosemite or later, you can choose to use your iCloud account to unlock your disk and reset your password.*
- If you're using OS X Mavericks, you can choose to store a FileVault recovery key with Apple by providing the questions and answers to three security questions. Choose answers that you're sure to remember.*
- If you don't want to use iCloud FileVault recovery, you can create a local recovery key. Keep the letters and numbers of the key somewhere safe—other than on your encrypted startup disk.
If you lose both your account password and your FileVault recovery key, you won't be able to log in to your Mac or access the data on your startup disk.
Encryption occurs in the background as you use your Mac, and only while your Mac is awake and plugged in to AC power. You can check progress in the FileVault section of Security & Privacy preferences. Any new files that you create are automatically encrypted as they are saved to your startup disk.
Photo Vault For Mac
When FileVault setup is complete and you restart your Mac, you will use your account password to unlock your disk and allow your Mac to finish starting up. FileVault requires that you log in every time your Mac starts up, and no account is permitted to log in automatically.
Reset your password or change your FileVault recovery key
If you forget your account password or it doesn't work, you might be able to reset your password.
If you want to change the recovery key used to encrypt your startup disk, turn off FileVault in Security & Privacy preferences. You can then turn it on again to generate a new key and disable all older keys.
Picture Vault For Mac
Turn off FileVault
Data Vault For Mac
If you no longer want to encrypt your startup disk, you can turn off FileVault:
Vault For Mac Os
- Choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Security & Privacy.
- Click the FileVault tab.
- Click , then enter an administrator name and password.
- Click Turn Off FileVault.
Decryption occurs in the background as you use your Mac, and only while your Mac is awake and plugged in to AC power. You can check progress in the FileVault section of Security & Privacy preferences.
Learn more
- Learn how to create and deploy a FileVault recovery key for Mac computers in your company, school, or other institution.
- If you're using FileVault in Mac OS X Snow Leopard, you can upgrade to FileVault 2 by upgrading to OS X Lion or later. After upgrading OS X, open FileVault preferences and follow the onscreen instructions to upgrade FileVault.
- RAID partitions or non-standard Boot Camp partitions on the startup drive might prevent OS X from installing a local Recovery System. Without a Recovery System, FileVault won't encrypt your startup drive. Learn more.
* If you store your recovery key with Apple or your iCloud account, there's no guarantee that Apple will be able to give you the key if you lose or forget it. Not all languages and regions are serviced by AppleCare or iCloud, and not all AppleCare-serviced regions offer support in every language. If you set up your Mac for a language that AppleCare doesn't support, then turn on FileVault and store your key with Apple (OS X Mavericks only), your security questions and answers could be in a language that AppleCare doesn't support.