Recently a company that I trust gave me a QR code to submit a customer review. When I tried using the QR code, Norton 360 for iOS blocked the website "qr.codes:443" and warned me that "we do not recommend visiting this site". Since I trusted this company, I decided to allow access. Now that I'm done with this particular QR code, I would like to remove the exception for this website. I'm absolutely mystified where this list is. I've looked in Norton 360 for iOS and also in my Norton 360 for Windows (signed in with the same Norton account as my phone). Please help, thank you
There is no 'whitelist' in the 360 iOS product for web sites. I believe if you used that QR code again, you would get the same warning. Your allowing access to the site was just a one off access for when you scanned that code.
Well I stand corrected. I guess that would show that there is a local 'whitelist' in the 360 app data. So if you need to clear any app data in the future, it appears you have to reinstall that app. iOS does not seem to have an option to just delete the app data.
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Now it does not know which files/folders I had chosen to backup. Nor does it remember my backup set name. I've changed the default back to the name I had but it still does not recall my settings. Without the list I'll backup all the junk on my computer. I don't want that - just my important documents.
I went through the same issue but, I used the same backup name and it looks good on the Cloud and for my external drive. Unfortunately, you do have to go through and re-pick the files/folders you want or don't want; that is a pain. Be nice if there was a way to revert back to what was set before at least for the Cloud BU.
There are 2 ways the product may be uninstalled, you can either use the very standard Add/Remove Software from the Windows Control Panel where all software on your system has uninstall options. In this option 1, you will be given the option to save your settings when you uninstall, and therefore during a reinstall, all the settings will return.
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Not saying you are wrong, but, certain circumstances lead to everything resetting to default; my experience. I've done the uninstall before keeping the data but, that doesn't always work properly. My last battle with Norton, trying to get my sign-on to work, I had to fully uninstall. Obviously that will wipe out the previous settings.
Apparently no solution at this point. Pretty poor job by Norton I'll say. All I was doing is keeping my Norton 360 up to date. It wanted to uninstall in order to do so. There was no "Keep previous settings" option (you'd think that would be the default).
Normally the Windows app uninstall will use any app built-in uninstaller, I've done it and it came up properly so that is odd it didn't for you. Unfortunately, software does sometimes F-up. My Norton on my desktop is working but missing Smart Scan, another story & thread.
For back up, if you used the defaults, would be easier. Either way, use defaults or make changes, it will be a full new backup so choose what is critical depending on how much Cloud space you have especially if you keep the old backup there. If you use the same BU name, it will overwrite what is there, that's what I did; fresh BU. Good luck
Two problems: (1) It made a new Backup Set by the same name (I thought it would merge). (2) When I ask it to tell me what files it will back up next, it gives me the same list of files it just did. In other words, it won't update the backup I did last last night.
Unfortunately, as you have found, when you do a full uninstall without saving settings, you lose the backup set settings from the original 360 installation. And when you set up a new backup set in the fresh 360, it does not add to, or merge with any existing backup in your cloud storage.
Interesting you have 2 of the same name now, normally overwrites the same name. A pain but, you may want to delete both from the Cloud and re-run the BU based on your latest settings/data. This will give you the most up to date in the Cloud while minimizing data space there. After that, it will append to it when you run further BUs.
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I exported my password data from he various places it was, mostly web browsers, imported it into spreadsheets and used the information there or somewhere else to re-arrange it into the format Bitwarden wanted. Then I saved it in a suitable format and imported it into Bitwarden.
It was actually easier that I expected it to be and it worked very well, with very few odds and ends to tidy up. I kept the import files for a few weeks, just in case, then exterminated them and the intermediate files.
I exported from norton to csv. I opened the csv with numbers app in mac, and I have tried to edit it to Bitwarden format (csv). I am honestly exhausted, and I do not appreciate saving a very sensitive file over and over again, with saved copies being hidden throughout my computer. Thanks for the help, just frustrated.
The screenshot that you have now posted bears no resemblance at all to what you had described in your response from earlier this week. Perhaps you opened the wrong file when you created the screenshot, or perhaps you uploaded the wrong screenshot image in your response above?
If you find the correct .csv file (the one with the six columns named Username, Password, Title, Login, URL, and Notes), please let me know, and I can give you instructions for how to import it into Bitwarden.
Bitwarden devs are paid, but community members who provide assistance on this forum (like me) are just Bitwarden users who try to help fellow users (like you) on a volunteer basis, with no pay or other compensation.
If you have both a Title column and a Login column in your .csv export, choose which you want to use as the names of the entries in in your Bitwarden vault, and delete the other column (but if it seems that the other column contains important information that should not be deleted, please request further assistance). Make sure that the column is fully deleted (i.e., not just cleared, leaving behind an empty column).
Starting in the first empty column (which should be the 6th column after completing Steps 1-2), create six more columns, by entering the following column titles in the first row of your .csv file:
If you have previously imported some or all of passwords into Bitwarden, then importing the .csv file again will create a large number of duplicate entries. To avoid this, you can follow the steps below to purge your Bitwarden vault (which deletes all entries previously stored in the vault):
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We were popular with legions of early adopters and we saw notable enthusiasm in the educational market. Teachers loved the idea of sharing documents with their students without the hassle and cost of software licenses. Our academic customers were passionate, smart, and vocal, which meant we got constant high-quality feedback. I responded by keeping a voluminous feature request list that was managed, quite naturally, in a Google Spreadsheet.
I was careful to track the priority and difficulty of the requests so we could spend our engineering time accordingly. Every time we got feedback from the forums, or talked to a customer, we made sure to reflect their requests in the spreadsheet, adding a new row if necessary.
My list emphasized broad themes such as formatting, printing, import/export, sharing, and commenting. We pushed hard to make sure each three-week release touched on as many top themes as possible. I felt good when a sprint made progress against all of our top priorities. Our sales and support counterparts passed along feedback from customers that reinforced our prioritization.
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