Category Archives: EviPass Technology

Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager — PassCypher finalist, Intersec Awards 2026 (FIDO-free, RAM-only)

Image of the Intersec Awards 2026 ceremony in Dubai. Large screen announcing PassCypher NFC HSM & HSM PGP (FREEMINDTRONIC) as a Best Cybersecurity Solution Finalist. Features Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager patented technology, designed in Andorra 🇦🇩 and France 🇫🇷.

Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 (QRPM) — Best Cybersecurity Solution Finalist by PassCypher sets a new benchmark in sovereign, offline security. Finalist for Best Cybersecurity Solution at Intersec Dubai, it runs entirely in volatile memory—no cloud, no servers—protecting identities and secrets by design. As an offline password manager, PassCypher delivers local cryptology with segmented PGP keys and AES-256-CBC for resilient, air-gapped operations. Unlike a traditional password manager, it enables passwordless proof of possession across browsers and systems with universal interoperability. International recognition is confirmed on the official website: Intersec Awards 2026 finalists list. Freemindtronic Andorra warmly thanks the Intersec Dubai team and its international jury for their recognition.

Fast summary — Sovereign offline passwordless ecosystem (QRPM)

Quick read (≈ 4 min): The nomination of Freemindtronic Andorra among the Intersec Awards 2026 finalists in Best Cybersecurity Solution validates a complete sovereign ecosystem built around PassCypher HSM PGP and PassCypher NFC HSM. Engineered from French-origin patents and designed to run entirely in volatile memory (RAM-only), it enables passwordless authentication without FIDO — no transfer, no sync, no persistence. As an offline sovereign password manager, PassCypher delivers segmented PGP + AES-256-CBC for quantum-resistant passwordless security, with embedded translations (14 languages) for air-gapped use. Explore the full architecture in our offline sovereign password manager overview.

⚙ A sovereign model in action

PassCypher HSM PGP and PassCypher NFC HSM operate as true physical trust modules. They execute all critical operations locally — PGP encryption, signature, decryption, and authentication — with no server, no cloud, no third party. This offline passwordless model relies on proof of physical possession and embedded cryptology, breaking with FIDO or centralized SaaS approaches.

Why PassCypher is an offline sovereign password manager

PassCypher HSM PGP and PassCypher NFC HSM act as physical trust modules: all crypto (PGP encryption, signature, decryption, authentication) runs locally, serverless and cloudless. This FIDO-free passwordless model relies on proof of physical possession and embedded cryptology, not centralized identity brokers.

Global reach

This distinction places Freemindtronic Andorra among the world’s top cybersecurity solutions. It reinforces its pioneering role in sovereign offline protection and confirms the relevance of a neutral, independent, and interoperable model — blending French engineering, Andorran innovation, and Emirati recognition at the world’s largest security and digital resilience show.

Passwordless authentication without FIDO — sovereign offline model (QRPM)

PassCypher delivers passwordless access without FIDO/WebAuthn or identity federation. Validation happens locally (proof of physical possession), fully offline, with no servers, no cloud, and no persistent stores — a core pillar of the Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 doctrine.

    • Proof of possession — NFC/HID or local context; no third-party validators.
    • Local cryptology — segmented PGP + AES-256-CBC in RAM-only (ephemeral).
    • Universal interoperability — works across browsers/systems without passkeys or sync.

Reading settings

Fast summary reading time: ≈ 4 minutes
Advanced summary reading time: ≈ 6 minutes
Full chronicle reading time: ≈ 35 minutes
Publication date: 2025-10-30
Last update: 2025-10-31
Complexity level: Expert — Cryptology & Sovereignty
Technical density: ≈ 79%
Languages available: FR · CAT· EN· ES ·AR
Specific focus: Sovereign analysis — Freemindtronic Andorra, Intersec Dubai, offline cybersecurity
Reading order: Summary → Doctrine → Architecture → Impacts → International reach
Accessibility: Screen-reader optimized — anchors & structured tags
Editorial type: Special Awards Feature — Finalist Best Cybersecurity Solution
Stakes level: 8.1 / 10 — international, cryptologic, strategic
About the author: Jacques Gascuel, inventor and founder of Freemindtronic Andorra, expert in HSM architectures, cryptographic sovereignty, and offline security.

Editorial note — This publication will be enriched after the official Intersec Awards 2026 ceremony in Dubai and the final communications related to the international selection.

Sovereign localization (offline)

Both PassCypher HSM PGP and PassCypher NFC HSM are natively translated into 13+ languages, including Arabic. Translations are embedded on-device (no calls to online translation services), ensuring confidentiality and air-gap availability.

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Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager — PassCypher finalist, Intersec Awards 2026 (FIDO-free, RAM-only)

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⮞ Preamble — International and institutional recognition

Freemindtronic Andorra extends its sincere thanks to the international jury and to Messe Frankfurt Middle East, organizer of the Intersec Awards, for the quality, rigor, and global reach of this competition dedicated to security, sovereignty, and innovation. Awarded in Dubai — at the heart of the United Arab Emirates — this distinction confirms recognition of an Andorran innovation with European roots that stands as a model of sovereign, quantum-resistant, offline passwordless authentication. It also illustrates the shared commitment between Europe and the Arab world to promote digital architectures grounded in trust, neutrality, and technological resilience.

Advanced summary — Doctrine & strategic reach of the sovereign offline ecosystem

Intersec 2026 — PassCypher finalist (Best Cybersecurity Solution)

The Intersec Awards 2026 finalist status in the Best Cybersecurity Solution category sets PassCypher apart not only as a technological breakthrough but as a full-fledged sovereign doctrine for quantum-resistant passwordless security. This nomination is historic: it is the first time an Andorran solution, rooted in French-origin patents and operating with zero network dependency, has been recognized globally as a credible alternative to centralized architectures of major digital powers.

↪ Geopolitical and doctrinal reach

This recognition gives Andorra a new role: a laboratory of digital neutrality within the wider European space. Freemindtronic advances a sovereign innovation model — Andorran by neutrality, French by heritage, European by vision. By entering Best Cybersecurity Solution, PassCypher symbolizes a strategic balance between cryptologic independence and normative interoperability.

RAM-only security for passwordless sovereignty (QRPM)

↪ An offline architecture built on volatile memory

The PassCypher ecosystem rests on a singular principle: all critical operations — storage, derivation, authentication, key management — occur exclusively in volatile memory. No data is written, synchronized, or retained in persistent storage. By design, this approach removes interception, espionage, and post-execution compromise vectors, including under quantum threats.

Segmented PGP + AES-256-CBC powering quantum-resistant passwordless operations

↪ Segmentation and sovereignty of secrets

The system applies dynamic key segmentation that decouples each secret from its usage context. Each PassCypher instance acts like an autonomous micro-HSM: it isolates identities, verifies rights locally, and instantly destroys any data after use. This erase-by-design model contrasts with FIDO and SaaS paradigms, where persistence and delegation form structural vulnerabilities.

↪ A symbolic recognition for sovereign doctrine

Listing Freemindtronic Andorra among the 2026 finalists elevates technological sovereignty as a driver of international innovation. In a landscape dominated by cloud-centric solutions, PassCypher proves that controlled disconnection can become a strategic asset, ensuring regulatory independence, GDPR/NIS2 alignment, and resilience against industrial interdependencies.

⮞ Extended international recognition

The global reach of PassCypher now extends to the defense security domain. The solution will also be showcased by AMG PRO at MILIPOL 2025 — Booth 5T158 — as the official French partner of Freemindtronic Andorra for dual-use civil and military technologies. This presence confirms PassCypher as a reference solution for sovereign cybersecurity tailored to defense, resilience, and critical industries.

⮞ In short

  • Architecture: RAM-only volatile memory security with PGP segmented keys + AES-256-CBC.
  • Model: passwordless authentication without FIDO, serverless, cloudless, air-gapped.
  • Positioning: offline sovereign password manager for regulated, disconnected, and critical contexts.
  • Recognition: Intersec 2026 Best Cybersecurity Solution finalistquantum-resistant passwordless security by design.

Chronicle — Sovereignty validated in Dubai (offline passwordless)

The official selection of Freemindtronic Andorra as an Intersec Awards 2026 Best Cybersecurity Solution finalist marks a historic shift. It is the first time an Andorran solution, engineered from French-origin patents and designed for zero network dependency, is recognized globally as a credible alternative to cloud-centric architectures.

↪ Sovereign algorithmic resilience (quantum-resistant by design)

Rather than relying on experimental post-quantum schemes, PassCypher delivers structural resilience: dynamic PGP key segmentation combined with AES-256-CBC, executed entirely in volatile memory (RAM-only). Keys are split into independent, ephemeral segments, disrupting exploitation paths—including those aligned with Grover or Shor. It is not PQC, but a quantum-resistant operating model by design.

↪ Innovation meets independence

The nomination validates a doctrine of resilience through disconnection: protect digital secrets with no server, no cloud, no trace. Authentication and secret management remain fully autonomous—passwordless authentication without FIDO, no WebAuthn, no identity brokers—so each user retains physical control over their keys, identities, and trust perimeter.

↪ Intersec Awards 2026 — ecosystem in the spotlight

Curated by Messe Frankfurt Middle East, Intersec highlights security innovations that balance performance, compliance, and independence. The presence of Freemindtronic Andorra underscores the international reach of a sovereign, offline cybersecurity doctrine developed in a neutral country and positioned as a credible alternative to global standards.

⮞ Intersec 2026 highlights

  • Event: Intersec Awards 2026 — Conrad Dubai
  • Category: Best Cybersecurity Solution
  • Finalist: Freemindtronic Andorra — PassCypher ecosystem
  • Innovation: Sovereign offline management of digital secrets (RAM-only, air-gapped)
  • Origin: French invention patents with international grants
  • Architecture: Volatile memory · Key segmentation · No cloud dependency
  • Doctrinal value: Technological sovereignty, geopolitical neutrality, cryptologic independence
  • Official validation: Official Intersec Awards 2026 finalists

This feature examines the doctrine, technical underpinnings, and strategic scope of this recognition—an institutional validation that proves digital identities can be safeguarded without connectivity.

Key takeaways:

  • Sovereign passwordless with 0 cloud / 0 server: proof of physical possession.
  • Universal interoperability (web/systems) without protocol dependency.
  • Structural resilience via key segmentation + volatile memory (RAM-only).

Official context — Intersec Awards 2026 for quantum-resistant passwordless security

Held in Dubai, the Intersec Awards have, since 2022, become a global reference for security, cybersecurity, and technological resilience. The 5th edition, scheduled for 13 January 2026 at the Conrad Dubai, will honor innovators across 17 categories spanning physical security, cybersecurity, fire safety, and critical infrastructure protection. From more than 180 international submissions, only five finalists were shortlisted in Best Cybersecurity Solution, underscoring a rigorous selection process led by an international panel of experts.

↪ An international jury of experts

Chosen by an international jury of 11 experts from industry, research, and public institutions — including Caterpillar, Aramco, ASIS, UL Solutions, and the University of Dubai — the Freemindtronic Andorra entry stood out for its doctrinal rigor and its clear break with conventional, connected models in offline cybersecurity. See the Intersec 2026 International Panel.

⮞ Official information

Event: Intersec Awards 2026 — 5th edition
Venue: Conrad Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Date: 13 January 2026
Category: Best Cybersecurity Solution
Number of categories: 17
Jury: Intersec 2026 International Panel
Finalists: Official finalists list

↪ An international competition of excellence

The Intersec Awards are widely regarded as a flagship event in global cybersecurity, gathering security leaders, innovation labs, ministries, and pioneering companies from five continents. This recognition rises as digital sovereignty becomes a strategic priority for states and enterprises alike.

↪ A first for Andorra and sovereign cybersecurity

As an official Intersec Awards 2026 finalist, Freemindtronic Andorra achieves a double first: the first Andorran company among UAE tech-competition finalists, and the first sovereign offline solution distinguished in Best Cybersecurity Solution. The nomination validates an alternative model where disconnected, segmented security outperforms cloud-centric approaches.

↪ A strong signal for Euro-Emirati cooperation

This distinction opens a dialogue between independent European innovation and the UAE’s strategy for digital resilience and data security. PassCypher’s positioning exemplifies this convergence: an Andorran, quantum-resistant passwordless technology, rooted in French engineering and recognized by an international Emirati institution — a bridge between technological neutrality and strategic security.

With the institutional context set, the next section explores the core of the PassCypher innovation.

PassCypher innovation — Sovereign offline passwordless: security & independence (QRPM)



In a market dominated by cloud stacks and FIDO passkeys, the PassCypher ecosystem positions itself as a sovereign, disruptive alternative. Developed by Freemindtronic Andorra on French-origin patents, it rests on a cryptographic foundation executed in volatile memory (RAM-only) with AES-256-CBC and PGP key segmentation—an approach aligned with our Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 strategy.

↪ Two pillars of one sovereign ecosystem

  • PassCypher HSM PGP: a sovereign secrets and password manager for desktops, fully offline. All crypto runs in RAM for passwordless authentication and air-gapped workflows.
  • PassCypher NFC HSM: a portable hardware variant for NFC-enabled Android devices, turning any NFC medium into a physical trust module for universal passwordless authentication.

Interoperable by design, both run with no server, no cloud, no sync and no third-party trust. Secrets, keys, and identities remain local, isolated, and temporary—the core of sovereign cybersecurity.

↪ Sovereign localization — embedded translations (offline)

  • 13+ languages natively supported, including Arabic (UI/UX and help).
  • Embedded translations: no network calls, no telemetry, no external APIs.
  • Full RTL compatibility for Arabic, with consistent typography and safe offline layout.

↪ Sovereign passwordless authentication — without FIDO, without cloud

Unlike FIDO models tied to centralized validators or biometric identity keys, PassCypher operates 100% independently and offline. Authentication relies on proof of physical possession and local cryptologic checks—no external services, no cloud APIs, no persistent cookies. The result: a passwordless password manager compatible with all major operating systems, browsers, and web platforms, plus Android NFC for contactless use—universal interoperability without protocol lock-in.

⮞ Labeled “Quantum-Resistant Offline Passwordless Security”

In the official Intersec process, PassCypher is described as quantum-resistant offline passwordless security. Through AES-256-CBC plus a multi-layer PGP architecture with segmented keys, each fragment is unusable in isolation—disrupting algorithmic exploitation paths (e.g., Grover, Shor). This is not a PQC scheme; it is structural resistance via logical fragmentation and controlled ephemerality.

↪ A model of digital independence and trust

Cloudless cybersecurity can outperform centralized designs when hardware autonomy, local cryptology, and non-persistence are first principles. PassCypher resets digital trust to its foundation—security by design—and proves it across civil, industrial, and defense contexts as an offline sovereign password manager.

With the technical bedrock outlined, the next section turns to the territorial and doctrinal origins that shaped this Best Cybersecurity Solution finalist.

Andorran innovation — European roots of a Sovereign Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager

Having outlined the technical bedrock of the PassCypher ecosystem, it’s essential to map its institutional and territorial scope. Beyond engineering, the Intersec 2026 Best Cybersecurity Solution finalist status affirms an Andorran cybersecurity innovation—European in heritage, neutral in governance—now visible on the global stage of sovereign cybersecurity.

↪ Between French roots and Andorran neutrality

Born in Andorra in 2016 and built on French-origin patents granted internationally, PassCypher is designed, developed, and produced in Andorra. Its NFC HSM is manufactured in Andorra and France with Groupe Syselec, a long-standing industrial partner. This dual identity—Franco-Andorran lineage with Andorran sovereign governance—offers a concrete model of European industrial cooperation.

This positioning lets Freemindtronic act as a neutral actor, independent of political blocs yet aligned with a shared vision of trusted innovation.

↪ Why neutrality matters for a sovereign password manager

Andorra’s historic neutrality and geography between France and Spain create ideal conditions for technologies of trust and sovereignty. PassCypher’s offline sovereign password manager approach—RAM-only, cloudless, passwordless—can be adopted under diverse regulatory regimes without foreign infrastructure lock-in.

↪ Recognition with symbolic and strategic scope

Selection at the Intersec Awards 2026 signals an independent European approach succeeding in a demanding international arena, the United Arab Emirates—a global hub for security innovation. It shows that neutral European territories such as Andorra can balance dominant tech blocs while advancing quantum-resistant passwordless security.

↪ A bridge between two visions of sovereignty

Europe advances digital sovereignty via GDPR, NIS2, and DORA; the UAE pursues state-grade cybersecurity centered on resilience and autonomy. Recognition in Dubai links these visions, proving that neutral sovereign innovation can bridge European compliance and Emirati strategic needs through cloudless, interoperable architectures.

↪ Andorran doctrine of digital sovereignty

Freemindtronic Andorra embodies neutral digital sovereignty: innovation first, regulatory independence, and universal interoperability. This doctrine underpins PassCypher’s adoption across public and private sectors as a passwordless password manager that operates offline by design.

⮞ Transition

This institutional recognition sets up the next chapter: the historic first of a passwordless password manager shortlisted in a UAE technology competition—anchoring PassCypher in the history of major international cybersecurity awards.

Historic first — Passwordless finalist in the UAE (offline, sovereign)

PassCypher NFC HSM & HSM PGP, developed by Freemindtronic Andorra, is to our knowledge the first password manager—across all types (cloud, SaaS, biometric, open-source, sovereign, offline)—to be shortlisted as a finalist in a UAE technology competition.
This milestone follows major events such as GITEX Technology Week (2005), Dubai Future Accelerators (2015) and the Intersec Awards (since 2022), with none having previously shortlisted a password manager before PassCypher in 2026. It validates a quantum-resistant passwordless manager 2026 approach rooted in sovereignty and offline design.

Cross-check — History of tech competitions in the UAE

Competition Year founded Scope Password managers as finalists
GITEX Global / Cybersecurity Awards 2005 Global tech, AI, cloud, smart cities ❌ None
Dubai Future Accelerators 2015 Disruptive startups ❌ None
UAE Cybersecurity Council Challenges 2019 National resilience ❌ None
Dubai Cyber Index 2020 Public-sector evaluation ❌ None
Intersec Awards 2022 Security, cybersecurity, innovation PassCypher (2026)

Best Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 — positioning & use cases

Recognized at Intersec Dubai, PassCypher positions as the best quantum-resistant passwordless manager 2026 for organizations needing sovereign, cloudless operations. The stack combines offline validation (proof of possession) with RAM-only cryptology and segmented keys. For market context, see our best password manager 2026 snapshot.

  • Regulated & air-gapped environments (defense, energy, healthcare, finance, diplomacy).
  • Zero cloud rollouts where data residency and minimization are mandatory.
  • Interoperability across browsers/systems without FIDO/WebAuthn dependencies.

In summary:

To the best of our knowledge, no cloud, SaaS, biometric, open-source or sovereign solution in this category had reached finalist status in the UAE before PassCypher. This recognition strengthens Andorra’s stance in the UAE cybersecurity ecosystem and underscores the relevance of a passwordless password manager built for sovereign, offline use.

Doctrinal typology — What this sovereign offline manager is not

Before detailing validated sovereignty, it helps to situate PassCypher by contrast. The matrix below clarifies the doctrinal break.

Model Applies to PassCypher? Why
Cloud manager No transfer, no sync; offline sovereign password manager.
FIDO / Passkeys Local proof of possession; no identity federation.
Open-source Patented architecture; sovereign doctrine and QA chain.
SaaS / SSO No backend, no delegation; cloudless by design.
Local vault No persistence; RAM-only ephemeral memory.
Network Zero Trust ✔️ Complementary Zero-DOM doctrine: off-network, segmented identities.

This framing highlights PassCypher as offline, sovereign, universally interoperable—not a conventional password manager tied to cloud or FIDO, but a quantum-resistant passwordless manager 2026 architecture.

Validated sovereignty — Toward an independent model for Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Security

Recognition of Freemindtronic Andorra at Intersec confirms more than a product win: it validates a sovereign offline architecture designed for independence.

↪ Institutional validation of the sovereign doctrine

Shortlisting in Best Cybersecurity Solution endorses a philosophy of disconnected, self-contained security: protect digital secrets without cloud, dependency, or delegation, while aligning with global frameworks (GDPR/NIS2/ISO-27001).

↪ A response to systemic dependencies

Where most solutions assume permanent connectivity, PassCypher’s volatile-memory operations and data non-persistence remove centralization risks. Trust shifts from “trust a provider” to “depend on none.”

↪ Toward a global standard

By combining sovereignty, universal compatibility, and segmented cryptographic resilience, PassCypher outlines a path to an international norm for quantum-resistant passwordless security across defense, energy, health, finance, and diplomacy.
Through Dubai’s recognition, Intersec signals a new paradigm for digital security—where an offline sovereign password manager can serve as a Best Cybersecurity Solution reference.

⮞ Transition — Toward doctrinal consolidation

The next section details the cryptologic foundations and architectures behind this model—volatile memory, dynamic segmentation, and quantum-resilient design—linking doctrine to deployable practice.

International reach — Toward a global model for sovereign offline passwordless

What began as a finalist nod now signals the international confirmation of a neutral European doctrine born in Andorra: a quantum-resistant passwordless manager 2026 approach that redefines how digital security can be designed, governed, and certified as offline, sovereign, and interoperable.

↪ Recognition that transcends borders

The distinction at the Intersec Awards 2026 in Dubai arrives as digital sovereignty becomes a global priority. As a Best Cybersecurity Solution finalist, Freemindtronic Andorra positions PassCypher as a transcontinental reference between Europe and the Middle East—bridging European trust-and-compliance traditions with Emirati resilience and operational neutrality. Between these poles, PassCypher acts as a secure interoperability bridge.

↪ A global showcase for disconnected cybersecurity

Joining the select circle of vendors delivering trusted offline cybersecurity, Freemindtronic Andorra addresses government, industrial, and defense sectors seeking cloud-independent protection. The outcome: a concrete path where data protection, geopolitical neutrality, and technical interoperability coexist—strengthening Europe’s capacity for digital resilience.

↪ A step toward a sovereign global standard

With data volatility (RAM-only) and non-centralization as defaults, PassCypher outlines a universal sovereign standard for identity and secrets management. Trans-regional bodies—European, Arab, Asian—can align around a model that reconciles technical security and regulatory independence. Intersec’s recognition acts as a norm-convergence accelerator between national doctrines and emerging international standards.

↪ From distinction to diffusion

Beyond institutions, momentum translates into industrial cooperation and trusted partnerships among states, companies, and research hubs. Appearances at reference events such as MILIPOL 2025 and Intersec Dubai reinforce the dual focus—civil and military—and rising demand for an offline sovereign password manager that remains passwordless without FIDO.

↪ A European trajectory with global scope

Andorra’s recognition via Freemindtronic shows how a neutral micro-state can influence global security balances. As alliances polarize, neutral sovereign innovation offers a unifying alternative: a quantum-resistant passwordless doctrine that elevates independence without sacrificing interoperability.

⮞ Transition — Toward final consolidation

This international reach is not honorary: it is a global validation of an independent, resilient, sovereign model. The next section consolidates PassCypher’s doctrine and its role in shaping a global standard for digital trust.

Consolidated sovereignty — Toward an international standard for sovereign passwordless trust

In conclusion, the Intersec Awards 2026 finalist status for PassCypher is more than honorary: it signals the global validation of a sovereign cybersecurity model built on controlled disconnection, RAM-only (volatile) operations, and segmented cryptology. This trajectory aligns naturally with diverse regulatory environments — from EU frameworks (GDPR, NIS2, DORA) to UAE references (PDPL, DESC, IAS) — and favors the sovereign ownership of secrets at the heart of a quantum-resistant passwordless manager 2026 approach.

↪ Global regulatory compatibility by design

The offline sovereign password manager model (no cloud, no servers, proof of possession) supports key compliance objectives across major jurisdictions by minimizing data movement and persistence:

  • United Kingdom: UK GDPR, Data Protection Act 2018, and NCSC CAF control themes (asset management, identity & access, data security).
  • United States: alignment with control families in NIST SP 800-53 / SP 800-171 and Zero Trust (SP 800-207); supports privacy/security safeguards relevant to sectoral laws such as HIPAA and GLBA (data minimization, access control, auditability).
  • China: principles of the Cybersecurity Law, Data Security Law, and PIPL (data localization & purpose limitation aided by local, ephemeral processing).
  • Japan: APPI requirements (purpose specification, minimization, breach mitigation) supported by volatile-memory operation and no persistent stores.
  • South Korea: PIPA safeguards (consent, minimization, technical/managerial protection) helped by air-gapped usage and local validation.
  • India: DPDP Act 2023 (lawful processing, data minimization, security by design) addressed through FIDO-free passwordless and on-device cryptology.

Note:

PassCypher does not claim automatic certification; it enables organizations to meet mandated outcomes (segregation of duties, least privilege, breach impact reduction) by keeping secrets local, isolated, and ephemeral.

↪ Consolidating a universal doctrine

The doctrine of sovereign cybersecurity has moved from manifesto to practice. PassCypher HSM PGP and PassCypher NFC HSM show that cryptographic autonomy, global interoperability, and resilience to emerging threats can coexist in an offline sovereign password manager. Cross-regional interest — Europe, the GCC, the UK, the US, and Asia — confirms a simple premise: trusted cybersecurity requires digital sovereignty. The offline, volatile architecture underpins passwordless authentication without FIDO and independent secrets management at enterprise and state scale.

↪ Multilingual by design (embedded, offline)

To support global deployments and air-gapped operations, PassCypher ships with 13+ embedded languages (including Arabic, English, French, Spanish, Catalan, Japanese, Korean, Chinese Simplified, Hindi, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Ukrainian). UI and help content are fully offline (no external translation APIs), preserving confidentiality and availability.

↪ A catalyst for international standardization

Recognition in Dubai acts as a standardization accelerator. It opens the way to shared criteria where disconnected security and segmented identity protection are certifiable properties. In this view, PassCypher operates as a functional prototype for a future international digital-trust standard, informing dialogues between regulators and standards bodies across the EU, the UK, the Middle East, the US and Asia, encouraging convergence between compliance and sovereign-by-design architectures.

↪ Andorran sovereignty as a lever for global balance

Andorra’s neutrality and regulatory agility offer an ideal laboratory for sovereign innovation. The success of Freemindtronic Andorra shows that a nation outside the EU, yet closely aligned with its economic and legal sphere, can act as a balancing force between major technology blocs. The distinction in Dubai highlights a new center of gravity for global digital sovereignty, supported by Andorran leadership and French industrial partnerships — relevant to ministries, regulators, and critical industries across the UAE and beyond.

↪ A shared horizon: trust, neutrality, independence

This doctrine reframes the cybersecurity triad:

  • trust — local verification and proof of possession;
  • neutrality — no intermediaries, no vendor lock-in;
  • independence — removal of cloud/server dependencies.

The outcome is an open, interoperable, sovereign model — a practical answer for governments and enterprises seeking to protect digital secrets without sacrificing user freedom or national sovereignty.

“PassCypher is not a password manager. It is a sovereign, resilient, autonomous cryptographic state, recognized as an Intersec Awards 2026 finalist.” — Freemindtronic Andorra, Dubai · 13 January 2026

⮞ Weak signals identified

  • Pattern: Rising demand for cloudless passwordless in critical infrastructure.
  • Vector: GDPR/NIS2/DORA convergence with off-network sovereign doctrines; UAE PDPL/DESC/IAS imperatives; growing UK/US/Asia regulatory emphasis on data minimization and zero trust.
  • Trend: Defense & public-sector forums (e.g., Milipol November 2025, GCC security events) exploring RAM-only architectures.

⮞ Sovereign use case | Resilience with Freemindtronic

In this context, PassCypher HSM PGP and PassCypher NFC HSM neutralize:

  • Local validation by proof of possession (NFC/HID), no servers or cloud.
  • Ephemeral decryption in volatile memory (RAM-only), zero persistence.
  • Dynamic PGP segmentation with contextual isolation of secrets.

FAQ — Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager & sovereign cybersecurity

Is PassCypher compatible with today’s browsers without FIDO passkeys?

Quick take

Yes. PassCypher validates access by proof of possession with no server, no cloud, and no WebAuthn.

Why it matters

Because everything runs in volatile memory (RAM-only), it stays offline, universal, interoperable across browsers and systems. This directly serves queries like passwordless authentication without FIDO and offline sovereign password manager inside our Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 positioning.

In one sentence

FIDO relies on WebAuthn and identity federation; PassCypher is FIDO-free, serverless, cloudless, using segmented PGP + AES-256-CBC entirely in RAM.

Context & resources

Federation centralises trust and increases the attack surface. PassCypher replaces it with local cryptology and ephemeral material (derive → use → destroy). See:
WebAuthn API hijacking,
DOM extension clickjacking (DEF CON 33).
Targets: quantum-resistant passwordless security, passwordless password manager 2026.

Short answer

Yes. Arabic (RTL) and 13+ languages are embedded; translations work fully offline (air-gap), no external API calls.

Languages included

العربية, English, Français, Español, Català, Deutsch, 日本語, 한국어, 简体中文, हिन्दी, Italiano, Português, Română, Русский, Українська — aligned with the long-tail sovereign password manager for multi-region rollouts.

Essentials

No cloud, no servers, no persistence: secrets are created, used, then destroyed in RAM.

Under the hood

The RAM-only password manager pattern plus key segmentation removes common exfiltration paths (databases, sync, extensions). That’s core to our Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 doctrine.

Both roles, one stack

It is an offline sovereign password manager that also enables passwordless access without FIDO.

How it plays together

As a manager, secrets live only in volatile memory. As passwordless, it proves physical possession across browsers/systems. Covers intents: best password manager 2026 offline, cloudless password manager for enterprises.

Operational view

Yes. It is cloudless and serverless by design, compatible with desktop, web, and Android NFC environments.

Risk notes

No identity broker, no SaaS tenant, no extension layer — consistent with Zero Trust (local verification, least privilege). Related reads:
Persistent OAuth / 2FA weaknesses,
APT29 app-password abuse.

What you can expect

PassCypher doesn’t certify you automatically; it enables outcomes (minimisation, least privilege, impact reduction) by keeping secrets local, isolated, ephemeral.

Where it fits

Aligned with policy goals in EU GDPR/NIS2/DORA, UAE PDPL/DESC/IAS, UK (UK GDPR/DPA 2018/NCSC CAF), US (NIST SP 800-53/171, SP 800-207 Zero Trust, sectoral HIPAA/GLBA), CN (CSL/DSL/PIPL principles), JP (APPI), KR (PIPA), IN (DPDP). Supports our secondary intent: Best Cybersecurity Solution finalist (Intersec 2026).

Plain explanation

Here, “quantum-resistant” refers to structural resistancesegmentation and ephemerality in RAM — not to new PQC algorithms.

Design choice

We don’t replace primitives; we limit usefulness and lifetime of material so isolated fragments are worthless. Matches the long-tail quantum-resistant passwordless security.

Snapshot

It avoids the layers under fire: no WebAuthn, no browser extensions, no OAuth persistence, no stored app passwords.

Go deeper

Recommended reading:
WebAuthn API hijacking,
DOM extension clickjacking,
Persistent OAuth flaw (2FA),
APT29 app-passwords.

Reason in brief

For demonstrating that offline, sovereign, passwordless security (RAM-only + segmentation) scales globally — without cloud or federation.

Awards intent capture

This answers searches like best cybersecurity solution 2026 and best password manager 2026 offline, and supports our keyphrase Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 with multilingual reach (incl. Arabic) for Dubai & GCC audiences.

⮞ Go further — PassCypher solutions worldwide

Discover where to evaluate our offline sovereign password manager stack and passwordless authentication without FIDO across EMEA. These links cover hardware options, RAM-only apps, and universal interoperability accessories.

AMG PRO (Paris, France)
KUBB Secure by Bleu Jour (Toulouse, France)
Fullsecure Andorra

Tip: for internal linking and search intent capture, reference anchors such as /passcypher/offline-password-manager/ and /passcypher/best-password-manager-2026/ where appropriate.

This is not a PQC (post-quantum cryptography) scheme: protection stems from structural resistance — fragmentation and ephemerality in RAM — described as “quantum-resistant” by design.

⮞ Strategic outlook

Recognition of Freemindtronic Andorra at Intersec 2026 underlines that sovereignty is a universal technology value. By enabling cloudless, serverless operations with passwordless authentication without FIDO, the Quantum-Resistant Passwordless Manager 2026 approach advances a pragmatic path toward a global standard for digital trust — born in Andorra, recognized in Dubai, relevant to EMEA, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific.

Ledger Security Breaches from 2017 to 2023: How to Protect Yourself from Hackers

Ledger Security Breaches from 2017 to 2023: How to Protect Yourself from Hackers
Ledger security breaches written by Jacques Gascuel, inventor specializing in safety and security of sensitive data, for Freemindtronic. This article will be updated with any new information on the topic.

Ledger security incidents: How Hackers Exploited Them and How to Stay Safe

Ledger security breaches have exposed the personal data and private keys of many users. Ledger is a French company that provides secure devices to store and manage your funds. But since 2017, hackers have targeted Ledger’s e-commerce and marketing database, as well as its software and hardware products. In this article, you will discover the different breaches, how hackers exploited them, what their consequences were, and how you can protect yourself from these threats.

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Ledger Security Breaches from 2017 to 2023: How to Protect Your Cryptocurrencies from Hackers

Have you ever wondered how safe your cryptocurrencies are? If you are using a Ledger device, you might think that you are protected from hackers and thieves. Ledger is a French company that specializes in cryptocurrency security. It offers devices that allow you to store and manage your funds securely. These devices are called hardware wallets, and they are designed to protect your private keys from hackers and thieves.

However, since 2017, Ledger has been victim of several security breaches, which have exposed the personal data and private keys of its users. These breaches could allow hackers to steal your cryptocurrencies or harm you in other ways. In this article, we will show you the different breaches that were discovered, how they were exploited, what their consequences were, and how you can protect yourself from these threats.

Ledger Security Issues: The Seed Phrase Recovery Attack (February 2018)

The seed phrase is a series of words that allows you to restore access to a cryptocurrency wallet. It must be kept secret and secure, as it gives full control over the funds. In February 2018, a security researcher named Saleem Rashid discovered a breach in the Ledger Nano S, which allowed an attacker with physical access to the device to recover the seed phrase using a side-channel attack.

How did hackers exploit the breach?

The attack consisted of using an oscilloscope to measure the voltage variations on the reset pin of the device. These variations reflected the operations performed by the secure processor of the Ledger Nano S, which generated the seed phrase. By analyzing these variations, the attacker could reconstruct the seed phrase and access the user’s funds.

Simplified diagram of the attack

Figure Ledger Security Issues: The Seed Phrase Recovery Attack (February 2018)
Statistics on the breach
  • Number of potentially affected users: about 1 million
  • Total amount of potentially stolen funds: unknown
  • Date of discovery of the breach by Ledger: February 20, 2018
  • Author of the discovery of the breach: Saleem Rashid, a security researcher
  • Date of publication of the fix by Ledger: April 3, 2018

Scenarios of hacker attacks

  • Scenario of physical access: The attacker needs to have physical access to the device, either by stealing it, buying it second-hand, or intercepting it during delivery. The attacker then needs to connect the device to an oscilloscope and measure the voltage variations on the reset pin. The attacker can then use a software tool to reconstruct the seed phrase from the measurements.
  • Scenario of remote access: The attacker needs to trick the user into installing a malicious software on their computer, which can communicate with the device and trigger the reset pin. The attacker then needs to capture the voltage variations remotely, either by using a wireless device or by compromising the oscilloscope. The attacker can then use a software tool to reconstruct the seed phrase from the measurements.

Sources

1Breaking the Ledger Security Model – Saleem Rashid published on March 20, 2018.

2Ledger Nano S: A Secure Hardware Wallet for Cryptocurrencies? – Saleem Rashid published on November 20, 2018.

Ledger Security Flaws: The Firmware Replacement Attack (March 2018)

The firmware is the software that controls the operation of the device. It must be digitally signed by Ledger to ensure its integrity. In March 2018, the same researcher discovered another breach in the Ledger Nano S, which allowed an attacker to replace the firmware of the device with a malicious firmware, capable of stealing the private keys or falsifying the transactions.

How did hackers exploit the Ledger Security Breaches?

The attack consisted of exploiting a vulnerability in the mechanism of verification of the firmware signature. The attacker could create a malicious firmware that passed the signature check, and that installed on the device. This malicious firmware could then send the user’s private keys to the attacker, or modify the transactions displayed on the device screen.

Simplified diagram of the attack

Figure Ledger Security Flaws: The Firmware Replacement Attack (March 2018)

Statistics on the breach

  • Number of potentially affected users: about 1 million
  • Total amount of potentially stolen funds: unknown
  • Date of discovery of the breach by Ledger: March 20, 2018
  • Author of the discovery of the breach: Saleem Rashid, a security researcher
  • Date of publication of the fix by Ledger: April 3, 2018

Scenarios of hacker attacks

  • Scenario of physical access: The attacker needs to have physical access to the device, either by stealing it, buying it second-hand, or intercepting it during delivery. The attacker then needs to connect the device to a computer and install the malicious firmware on it. The attacker can then use the device to access the user’s funds or falsify their transactions.
  • Scenario of remote access: The attacker needs to trick the user into installing the malicious firmware on their device, either by sending a fake notification, a phishing email, or a malicious link. The attacker then needs to communicate with the device and send the user’s private keys or modify their transactions.

Sources

: [Breaking the Ledger Security Model – Saleem Rashid] published on March 20, 2018.

: [Ledger Nano S Firmware 1.4.1: What’s New? – Ledger Blog] published on March 6, 2018.

Ledger Security Incidents: The Printed Circuit Board Modification Attack (November 2018)

The printed circuit board is the hardware part of the device, which contains the electronic components. It must be protected against malicious modifications, which could compromise the security of the device. In November 2018, a security researcher named Dmitry Nedospasov discovered a breach in the Ledger Nano S, which allowed an attacker with physical access to the device to modify the printed circuit board and install a listening device, capable of capturing the private keys or modifying the transactions.

How did hackers exploit the breach?

The attack consisted of removing the case of the device, and soldering a microcontroller on the printed circuit board. This microcontroller could intercept the communications between the secure processor and the non-secure processor of the Ledger Nano S, and transmit them to the attacker via a wireless connection. The attacker could then access the user’s private keys, or modify the transactions displayed on the device screen.

Simplified diagram of the attack

figure Ledger Security Incidents: The Printed Circuit Board Modification Attack (November 2018)

Statistics on the breach

  • Number of potentially affected users: unknown
  • Total amount of potentially stolen funds: unknown
  • Date of discovery of the breach by Ledger: November 7, 2019
  • Author of the discovery of the breach: Dmitry Nedospasov, a security researcher
  • Date of publication of the fix by Ledger: December 17, 2020

Scenarios of hacker attacks

  • Scenario of physical access: The attacker needs to have physical access to the device, either by stealing it, buying it second-hand, or intercepting it during delivery. The attacker then needs to remove the case of the device and solder the microcontroller on the printed circuit board. The attacker can then use the wireless connection to access the user’s funds or modify their transactions.
  • Scenario of remote access: The attacker needs to compromise the wireless connection between the device and the microcontroller, either by using a jammer, a repeater, or a hacker device. The attacker can then intercept the communications between the secure processor and the non-secure processor, and access the user’s funds or modify their transactions.

Sources

  • [Breaking the Ledger Nano X – Dmitry Nedospasov] published on November 7, 2019.
  • [How to Verify the Authenticity of Your Ledger Device – Ledger Blog] published on December 17, 2020.

Ledger Security Breaches: The Connect Kit Attack (December 2023)

The Connect Kit is a software that allows users to manage their cryptocurrencies from their computer or smartphone, by connecting to their Ledger device. It allows to check the balance, send and receive cryptocurrencies, and access services such as staking or swap.

The Connect Kit breach was discovered by the security teams of Ledger in December 2023. It was due to a vulnerability in a third-party component used by the Connect Kit. This component, called Electron, is a framework that allows to create desktop applications with web technologies. The version used by the Connect Kit was not up to date, and had a breach that allowed hackers to execute arbitrary code on the update server of the Connect Kit.

How did hackers exploit the Ledger Security Breaches?

The hackers took advantage of this breach to inject malicious code into the update server of the Connect Kit. This malicious code was intended to be downloaded and executed by the users who updated their Connect Kit software. The malicious code aimed to steal the sensitive information of the users, such as their private keys, passwords, email addresses, or phone numbers.

Simplified diagram of the attack

Figure Ledger Security Breaches The Connect Kit Attack (December 2023)

Statistics on the breach

  • Number of potentially affected users: about 10,000
  • Total amount of potentially stolen funds: unknown
  • Date of discovery of the breach by Ledger: December 14, 2023
  • Author of the discovery of the breach: Pierre Noizat, director of security at Ledger
  • Date of publication of the fix by Ledger: December 15, 2023

Scenarios of hacker attacks

  • Scenario of remote access: The hacker needs to trick the user into updating their Connect Kit software, either by sending a fake notification, a phishing email, or a malicious link. The hacker then needs to download and execute the malicious code on the user’s device, either by exploiting a vulnerability or by asking the user’s permission. The hacker can then access the user’s information or funds.
  • Scenario of keyboard: The hacker needs to install a keylogger on the user’s device, either by using the malicious code or by another means. The keylogger can record the keystrokes of the user, and send them to the hacker. The hacker can then use the user’s passwords, PIN codes, or seed phrases to access their funds.
  • Scenario of screen: The hacker needs to install a screen recorder on the user’s device, either by using the malicious code or by another means. The screen recorder can capture the screen of the user, and send it to the hacker. The hacker can then use the user’s QR codes, addresses, or transaction confirmations to steal or modify their funds.

Sources

Ledger Security Breaches: The Data Leak (December 2020)

The database is the system that stores the information of Ledger customers, such as their names, addresses, phone numbers and email addresses. It must be protected against unauthorized access, which could compromise the privacy of customers. In December 2020, Ledger revealed that a breach in its database had exposed the personal data of 292,000 customers, including 9,500 in France.

How did hackers exploit the breach?

The breach had been exploited by a hacker in June 2020, who had managed to access the database via a poorly configured API key. The hacker had then published the stolen data on an online forum, making them accessible to everyone. Ledger customers were then victims of phishing attempts, harassment, or threats from other hackers, who sought to obtain their private keys or funds.

Simplified diagram of the attack :

Statistics on the breach

  • Number of affected users: 292,000, including 9,500 in France
  • Total amount of potentially stolen funds: unknown
  • Date of discovery of the breach by Ledger: June 25, 2020
  • Author of the discovery of the breach: Ledger, after being notified by a researcher
  • Date of publication of the fix by Ledger: July 14, 2020

Scenarios of hacker attacks

  • Scenario of phishing: The hacker sends an email or a text message to the user, pretending to be Ledger or another trusted entity. The hacker asks the user to click on a link, enter their credentials, or update their device. The hacker then steals the user’s information or funds.
  • Scenario of harassment: The hacker calls or visits the user, using their personal data to intimidate them. The hacker threatens the user to reveal their identity, harm them, or steal their funds, unless they pay a ransom or give their private keys.
  • Scenario of threats: The hacker uses the user’s personal data to find their social media accounts, family members, or friends. The hacker then sends messages or posts to the user or their contacts, threatening to harm them or expose their cryptocurrency activities, unless they comply with their demands.

Sources:
– [Ledger Data Breach: A Cybersecurity Update – Ledger Blog] published on January 29, 2021.

Comparison with other crypto wallets

Ledger is not the only solution to secure your cryptocurrencies. There are other options, such as other hardware wallets, software wallets, or exchanges. Each option has its advantages and disadvantages, depending on your needs and preferences. For example, other hardware wallets, such as Trezor or Keepser, offer similar features and security levels as Ledger, but they may have different designs, interfaces, or prices. Software wallets, such as Exodus or Electrum, are more convenient and accessible, but they are less secure and more vulnerable to malware or hacking. Exchanges, such as Coinbase or Binance, are more user-friendly and offer more services, such as trading or staking, but they are more centralized and risky, as they can be hacked, shut down, or regulated. Another option is to use a cold wallet, such as SeedNFC HSM, which is a patented HSM that uses NFC technology to store and manage your cryptocurrencies offline, without any connection to the internet or a computer. It also allows you to create up to 100 cryptocurrency wallets and check the balances from this NFC HSM.

Technological, Regulatory, and Societal Projections

The future of cryptocurrency security is uncertain and challenging. Many factors can affect Ledger and its users, such as technological, regulatory, or societal changes.

Technological changes

It changes could bring new threats, such as quantum computing, which could break the encryption of Ledger devices, or new solutions, such as biometric authentication or segmented key authentication patented by Freemindtronic, which could improve the security of Ledger devices.

Regulatory changes

New rules or restrictions could affect Cold Wallet and Hardware Wallet manufacturers and users, such as Ledger. For example, KYC (Know Your Customer) or AML (Anti-Money Laundering) requirements could compromise the privacy and anonymity of Ledger users. They could also ban or limit the use of cryptocurrencies, which could reduce the demand and value of Ledger devices. On the other hand, other manufacturers who have anticipated these new legal constraints could have an advantage over Ledger. Here are some examples of regulatory changes that could affect Ledger and other crypto wallets:

  • MiCA, the proposed EU regulation on crypto-asset markets, aims to create a harmonized framework for crypto-assets and crypto-asset service providers in the EU. It also seeks to address the risks and challenges posed by crypto-assets, such as consumer protection, market integrity, financial stability and money laundering.
  • U.S. interagency report on stablecoins recommends that Congress consider new legislation to ensure that stablecoins and stablecoin arrangements are subject to a federal prudential framework. It also proposes additional features, such as limiting issuers to insured depository institutions, subjecting entities conducting stablecoin activities (e.g., digital wallets) to federal oversight, and limiting affiliations between issuers and commercial entities.
  • Revised guidance from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on virtual assets and virtual asset service providers (VASPs) clarifies the application of FATF standards to virtual assets and VASPs. It also introduces new obligations and recommendations for PSAVs, such as the implementation of the travel rule, licensing and registration of PSAVs, and supervision and enforcement of PSAVs.

These regulatory changes could have significant implications for Ledger and other crypto wallets. They could require them to comply with new rules and standards, to obtain new licenses or registrations, to implement new systems and processes, and to face new supervisory and enforcement actions.

Societal changes

Societal changes could influence the perception and adoption of Ledger and cryptocurrencies, such as increased awareness and education, which could increase the trust and popularity of Ledger devices, or increased competition and innovation, which could challenge the position and performance of Ledger devices. For example, the EviSeed NFC HSM technology allows the creation of up to 100 cryptocurrency wallets on 5 different blockchains chosen freely by the user.

Technological alternatives

Technological alternatives are already available, such as EviCore NFC HSM, EviCore HSM OpenPGP, EviCore NFC HSM Browser Extension and the NFC HSM devices that work without contact, developed and manufactured by Freemindtronic in Andorra. These are new cyber security and safety technologies that use HSMs with or without NFC. They offer a wide range of security features to manage your cryptocurrencies and other digital assets. These technologies also offer the hardware management of complex and complicated passwords by EviPass NFC HSM, OTP (2FA) keys by EviOTP NFC HSM, Seed Phrases by EviSeed NFC HSM, and the creation of multiple cryptocurrency wallets on the same device.

Conclusion

Ledger, the French leader in cryptocurrency security, has faced several security breaches since 2017. As a result of these breaches, hackers could steal the private keys and funds of Ledger users. In response to these threats, Ledger reacted by publishing security updates, informing its users, and strengthening its protection measures. However, Ledger users must be vigilant and follow the recommendations of Ledger to protect themselves from these attacks. Despite these challenges, Ledger remains a reliable and secure device to manage cryptocurrencies, as long as the best practices of digital hygiene are respected. If you want to learn more about Ledger and its products, you can visit their official website or read their blog. Additionally, you can also check their security reports and their help center for more information.

PassCypher NFC HSM: Secure and Convenient Password Management

PassCypher NFC HSM contactless hardware password manager Freemindtronic Technology from Andorra

PassCypher NFC HSM by Jacques Gascuel This article will be updated with any new information on the topic, and readers are encouraged to leave comments or contact the author with any suggestions or additions.

Discover Secure Password Management with PassCypher NFC HSM and PassCypher Pro NFC HSM

Protect your passwords with innovative solutions from PassCypher. From contactless management to invention patents, enhanced security, and versatility, find out how PassCypher provides you with a convenient and secure solution for password management. Don’t let data vulnerability be a concern anymore. Dive into our dedicated article on PassCypher products and take control of your password security.

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PassCypher NFC HSM and PassCypher Pro NFC HSM: Secure and Convenient Password Management

Introduction

PassCypher offers a range of contactless hardware password managers known as PassCypher NFC HSM and PassCypher Pro NFC HSM. These products are protected by three invention patents and incorporate EviPass, EviOTP, and EviCore NFC HSM technologies, along with Freemindtronic’s NFC HSM devices, EviTag, and Evicard. PassCypher allows you to securely and conveniently store and manage passwords, one-time passwords (OTP), and HMAC-based passwords. It eliminates the need for a power source or internet connection. Additionally, PassCypher features a built-in RSA 4096 key manager with a random generator capable of changing the key up to one million times without any risk of error. It seamlessly works on Android NFC-enabled phones with fingerprint access control and is compatible with computers supporting Chromium-based or Firefox-based web browsers with autofill and auto login functionalities. For computer use, users need to install the PassCypher NFC Web Browser Extension and EviDNS software, which acts as a hotspot for pairing the extension with the PassCypher NFC HSM application through the local network. PassCypher is not compatible with Safari.

 

Features and Benefits

PassCypher’s web browser extension offers several convenient features, including:

Management of Paired Phones

With PassCypher, you can easily manage the phones paired with the EviCore NFC HSM for Web Browser extension. You can add phones to the list of paired devices, manage favorites, make direct calls, and delete paired phones.

Create a New Label (Secret)

PassCypher enables you to create labels containing sensitive information such as login IDs, passwords, OTPs, or HOTPs. You can define the name of the label and use an intelligent random password generator for login IDs and segmented keys. Additionally, PassCypher allows you to create a compatible QR Code for each label.

Digital Post-it

Retrieve labels from the NFC HSM in clear text using the Digital Post-it feature. This enables you to manually use the information for copying and pasting, including login IDs.

Free Tools: Advanced Password Manager

PassCypher offers a real-time entropy state bar based on Shannon’s mathematical function and a passphrase generator. It also includes various features such as checking if your password has been compromised in a data breach, generating personalized password and segmented key labels, and fetching login credentials and cloud keys.

Authenticator Sandbox

The Authenticator Sandbox function provides automatic anti-phishing protection by verifying the URL before authorizing auto-filling login fields. It leverages EviCore NFC HSM technology to store the URL during the first automatic login to a favorite site. Upon subsequent logins, PassCypher checks if the URL matches the auto-login request, ensuring seamless and secure authentication.

Segmented Key Generator

PassCypher introduces an innovative segmented key generator that requires multiple parties to reconstruct the key. The extension automatically populates the appropriate fields for each key component, ensuring the key’s integrity and security.

Pwned Function (Enhanced Cybersecurity)

Pwned offers proactive monitoring for online credentials. By leveraging a database of compromised usernames and passwords, PassCypher securely checks if your login information has been compromised in past data breaches. This feature helps prevent identity theft by promptly alerting you to compromised credentials and enabling you to change your password immediately.

Secret Phrase Generator (Passphrase)

Generate mnemonic phrases with basic salting using PassCypher’s Secret Phrase Generator. You can customize the number of words in your passphrase and choose special characters for separation. The real-time entropy control based on Shannon’s mathematical function enhances the security of your passphrases.

 

Advantages of PassCypher

PassCypher offers numerous advantages to its users:

  1. High-level Security: High-level security: PassCypher provides optimal security with AES 256-bit segmented key post-quantum encryption in NFC HSM memories, zero-knowledge architecture, patented technology and an integrated RSA 4096 key that enhances share security and remote backup of OTP passwords, segmented keys and secret keys.
  2. User-Friendly: PassCypher is easy to use with its contactless NFC card or tag, which can be conveniently placed on smartphones, computers, or other compatible devices.
  3. Environmentally Friendly and Cost-effective: PassCypher eliminates the need for batteries, cables, or power sources, making it eco-friendly and cost-effective.
  4. Versatility: PassCypher can manage passwords, OTPs, and HOTPs, providing two-factor authentication capabilities.
  5. Compatibility: PassCypher is compatible with various operating systems (Windows, Linux, MacOS, Android, iOS) and web browsers based on Chromium or Firefox.
  6. One-time Purchase: There are no financial commitments or subscriptions required to purchase PassCypher products.
  7. Absolute Anonymity: PassCypher follows the principles of zero-trust and plug-and-play, requiring no account creation or collection of personal or hardware information. It ensures complete user anonymity.
  8. Built-in Black Box: The NFC HSM Tag and Card devices feature a black box that records certain events, such as the number of incorrect password attempts, providing traceability and security.
  9. Air Gap Functionality: PassCypher operates in an air gap mode, independent of servers or secret databases. It securely stores all data in real-time on the volatile memory of the phone or computer.
  10. Physically Decentralized Authenticator Sandbox: The Authenticator Sandbox autofill and auto login feature is securely stored within the Evicypher application on Android phones. This allows for extreme portability across multiple computers, utilizing the energy harvested from the phone’s NFC signal without contact.
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Freemindtronic Receives Global InfoSec Awards for Innovative PassCypher NFC HSM Technology

Freemindtronic, the proud developer of PassCypher NFC HSM, has been recognized as a winner of the prestigious Global InfoSec Awards during the RSA Conference 2021. The company was honored with three awards, including the titles of “Most Innovative Hardware Password Manager” and “Next-Gen in Secrets Management” by Cyber Defense Magazine. This achievement highlights Freemindtronic’s commitment to delivering cutting-edge cybersecurity solutions. With PassCypher NFC HSM’s advanced technology, users can enjoy secure and convenient password management. Join us as we celebrate this remarkable accomplishment and learn more about the exceptional features that make PassCypher a standout choice for safeguarding sensitive information.

Disadvantages of PassCypher

Despite its many advantages, PassCypher has a few limitations:

  1. NFC Device Requirement: PassCypher requires an NFC-compatible device to function, which may limit its use on certain devices or in specific situations.
  2. Risk of Loss or Theft: Like any portable device, PassCypher can be lost or stolen, necessitating backup and recovery measures.
  3. Incompatibility with Safari: PassCypher is not compatible with the Safari browser, which may be inconvenient for Mac or iPhone users.

Lifecycle

PassCypher has an exceptionally long lifecycle, estimated to be over 40 years without maintenance or a power source. It can handle up to 1,000,000 guaranteed error-free read/write cycles, equivalent to daily use for over a millennium. PassCypher is designed to withstand extreme temperatures ranging from -40°C to +85°C. It is also resistant to shocks, scratches, magnetic fields, X-rays, and its TAG version is enveloped in military-grade resin, surpassing IP89K standards for superior waterproofing. As a result, PassCypher offers exceptional durability and resilience against external factors.

Comparison with Competitors

PassCypher stands out from its competitors in several ways:

  1. Contactless Hardware Manager: PassCypher is the only password manager that operates without requiring physical contact, providing a more convenient and hygienic solution compared to USB keys or biometric readers.
  2. Patent Protection: PassCypher is protected by three international invention patents, ensuring exclusivity and reliability compared to other solutions in the market.
  3. Innovative Technology: PassCypher incorporates EviPass, EviOTP, and EviCore NFC HSM technologies, along with Freemindtronic’s NFC HSM devices, EviTag and Evicard, providing unparalleled performance and features.
  4. RSA 4096 Key Manager: PassCypher is the only password manager that offers an RSA 4096 key manager with a random generator, allowing for one million key changes without the risk of error. This provides an additional level of security and flexibility..
  5. Value Proposition for Customers: PassCypher brings significant value to its customers by enabling them to:
    • Protect their data: PassCypher ensures the security of personal and professional data, guarding against hacking, theft, or loss.
    • Simplify password management: PassCypher centralizes the management of passwords and access codes, offering a user-friendly solution for securely handling them.
    • Securely access online accounts: PassCypher enables secure access to online accounts, even without an internet connection or power source.
    • Benefit from innovative technology: By choosing PassCypher, customers gain access to innovative and patented technology developed by Freemindtronic, a leading company in the NFC HSM field.
    • Flexibly secure secrets: PassCypher offers various options for securely backing up secrets, including cloning between NFC HSM devices (EviCard or EviTag), partial or complete copying between nearby or remote devices using RSA 4096 public key encryption, or encrypted archiving on any encrypted storage media using the RSA 4096 public key of an NFC HSM EviCard or EviTag. This flexibility provides peace of mind and adaptability to customers.
    • Choose the appropriate storage format: PassCypher is available in three different formats with varying secret storage capacities, allowing customers to choose the one that best suits their needs and budget.
    • Multilingual Support: The PassCypher Android application and web browser extension are available in 14 different languages. Users can use PassCypher in their preferred language, including Arabic (AR), Catalan (CA), Chinese (CN), German (DE), English (EN), Spanish (ES), French (FR), Italian (IT), Japanese (JA), Portuguese (PT), Romanian (RO), Russian (RU), Ukrainian (UK), and Bengali (BIN). This feature provides a personalized experience and facilitates the use of PassCypher in various international contexts.

Comparison with Competitors

To better understand the advantages of PassCypher compared to other solutions in the market, here is a comparative table:

Features PassCypher NFC HSM Competitor A Competitor B
Contactless Management Yes Yes No
Invention Patents Yes (3 international patents) No Yes (1 national patent)
NFC HSM Technology Yes (EviPass, EviOTP, EviCore) No Yes (proprietary technology)
RSA 4096 Key Manager Yes No Yes (RSA 2048 key)
Versatility Passwords, TOTP, HOTP, Fingerprint Passwords Passwords, Fingerprint
OS Compatibility Windows, Linux, MacOS, Android, iOS Windows, MacOS Windows, Linux, MacOS, Android
Browser Compatibility Chromium- or Firefox-based browsers Chrome, Firefox, Safari Chrome, Firefox
One-Time Purchase Yes Subscription Yes
Data Protection AES 256-bit, Zero-knowledge architecture for NFC memory AES 128-bit AES 256-bit, ECC, RSA 4096
Virtual Keyboard Support USB Bluetooth Multilingual No No
Biometric Authentication Fingerprint (from NFC-enabled phone) No Fingerprint (selected devices)
RSA-4096 Key Regeneration Yes (up to 1 million times without errors) N/A N/A
PassCypher Pro Compatibility All OS, Computers, TVs, NFC-enabled phones Limited compatibility Limited compatibility

This table highlights the unique features of PassCypher, such as contactless management, invention patents, NFC HSM technology, RSA 4096 key manager, and extensive compatibility with operating systems and browsers. Compared to competitors, PassCypher offers superior versatility, enhanced security, and flexibility in purchasing options.

Comparison with Competitors

PassCypher stands out from its competitors in several key aspects. Let’s compare PassCypher NFC HSM and PassCypher Pro NFC HSM with two major competitors in the market, Competitor A and Competitor B.

PassCypher NFC HSM vs. Competitor A

PassCypher NFC HSM offers contactless management, protected by three international invention patents, and utilizes advanced NFC HSM technology (EviPass, EviOTP, EviCore). It includes an RSA 4096 key manager, enabling secure key changes and flexibility. PassCypher NFC HSM supports passwords, OTPs, and HOTPs for versatile authentication. It is compatible with various operating systems and browsers, including Windows, Linux, MacOS, Android, and iOS, as well as Chromium and Firefox. PassCypher NFC HSM is available for one-time purchase, providing long-term value and eliminating subscription fees. With AES 256-bit data protection and a zero-knowledge architecture, PassCypher ensures the highest level of security.

In comparison, Competitor A also offers contactless management and AES 128-bit data protection. However, it lacks the extensive patent protection, advanced NFC HSM technology, and RSA 4096 key manager provided by PassCypher. Additionally, Competitor A may have limited compatibility with operating systems and browsers, restricting its usability for some users.

PassCypher NFC HSM vs. Competitor B

PassCypher NFC HSM surpasses Competitor B with its contactless management, three international invention patents, and NFC HSM technology (EviPass, EviOTP, EviCore). It includes an RSA 4096 key manager for secure and flexible key changes. PassCypher NFC HSM supports passwords, OTPs, and HOTPs, providing versatile authentication options. It offers compatibility with a wide range of operating systems and browsers, including Windows, Linux, MacOS, Android, and iOS, as well as Chromium and Firefox. The one-time purchase model of PassCypher NFC HSM eliminates ongoing subscription fees. With AES 256-bit data protection and a zero-knowledge architecture, PassCypher ensures the utmost security for user data.

In comparison, Competitor B offers contactless management, AES 256-bit data protection, and compatibility with multiple operating systems. However, it lacks the advanced NFC HSM technology, invention patents, and RSA 4096 key manager offered by PassCypher, limiting its capabilities and security features.

Conclusion

PassCypher NFC HSM and PassCypher Pro NFC HSM are cutting-edge solutions for secure and convenient password management. With advanced NFC HSM technology, patent protection, and versatile features, PassCypher offers unparalleled security and flexibility. Whether it’s protecting personal or professional data, simplifying password management, or securely accessing online accounts, PassCypher provides a comprehensive solution.

By choosing PassCypher, users gain access to innovative technology, a one-time purchase model, and multilingual support. PassCypher’s ability to securely back up secrets and its compatibility with various operating systems and browsers further enhance its appeal. In comparison to its competitors, PassCypher demonstrates superior versatility, advanced security measures, and a user-friendly approach.

Discover the next level of password management with PassCypher NFC HSM and PassCypher Pro NFC HSM, and experience the peace of mind that comes with secure and convenient password management.

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