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Keymaster

July 14, 2026

MastodonView live ↗

Your brain remembers "the thing I set up for the tax stuff last spring." Your password manager wants an exact vault name and a folder path. Keymaster closes that gap: ask in plain English, get the credential back. Semantic search over your logins, with zero-knowledge encryption so the server never sees plaintext.

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BlueskyView live ↗

You don't remember the vault name. You remember "that login for the tax thing last spring." Keymaster searches your credentials the way you actually recall them: plain English in, the right entry out. Zero-knowledge encryption, so the server never sees the plaintext.

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Threads

Password managers make you retrieve by exact name and folder. Your memory works by context: "the account I made for the tax stuff last spring." Keymaster searches credentials in plain English and hands back the right one, with zero-knowledge encryption so the server never sees your plaintext.

NostrView live ↗

Password managers make you retrieve credentials the way a filesystem stores them: exact name, right folder. Your memory doesn't work like that. You remember "the login I set up for the tax stuff last spring." Keymaster searches that way. Ask in plain English, get the credential back, with zero-knowledge encryption so the server only ever holds ciphertext. The retrieval got smart without the storage getting less private.

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You don't remember the vault name. You remember "the login for the tax thing last spring." Keymaster searches credentials in plain English and hands back the right one. Zero-knowledge encryption, so the server never sees plaintext.

Farcaster

Password managers want an exact name and folder. Your memory works by context: "the account I set up for the tax stuff last spring." Keymaster searches your credentials that way, and the server never sees the plaintext.

Sourced from Keymaster.