
So, even though the app is based in the US, you will be able to work with it no matter what language you speak. It supports English, German, Dutch, Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese. LastPass uses AES 256-bit blocks for its end-to-end encryption, which is unbreakable by current computational powers. You can access all your accounts with the master LastPass password. I think I prefer LastPass because I’m used to the way it works, but DashLane certainly has a better desktop app experience and some other positives.You don’t have to remember multiple passwords. I’m a LastPass user who recently gave DashLane a week or so trial. You should probably do a comparison of their feature lists to help you make that decision. Should you now ditch LastPass and find another password solution? Eh, it’s still cheaper than both DashLane and 1Password’s premium tiers with this price increase. LastPass did say today that existing Premium customers will “maintain all previous sharing capabilities via their one shared folder.” So for current Premium folks, nothing is really changing other than the doubling of the price you pay. In the Premium tier, the shared family folder is going away for new Premium tier users. If you were a free user with an emergency contact selected, you will still have access to that going forward. Outside of the price increase, is anything changing? Yep, we have changes! In the free tier, unlimited sharing and emergency access have be taken away and moved to the Premium tier. Shiny new things are expensive to create and people need to pay for these shiny new things. Why the price increase? LastPass doesn’t just come outright and say it, but the announcement today reminds us all that they just polished off a new and improved user experience, while almost simultaneously announcing that new Families plan. LastPass also introduced a price to its new Families plan, which will cost $48 per year and offer up to 6 users access to your password locker. Going forward, the Premium LastPass tier is jumping up from $12 per year to $24 per year. I probably don’t need to say this, but that almost always means an increase in what you’ll pay. LastPass, one of the most popular password lockers, announced this morning that its personal lineup pricing is changing.
