![]() I myself use Destiny Item Manager for Chrome because I am more comfortable dealing with browser-related security issues. If the manager (browser or app) is playing nice, only looking at what it should, discarding your credentials, and only using the Bungie API, you are safe because there is no way to delete stuff (weapons, gear, characters) or even discard or use consumables.īottom line, it really comes down to how much you trust the developers, the amount of risk you want to take, and, ultimately, your perception of the cost/benefit. So the app can now, theoretically again, send your user and password to the developer who can log into any Xbox or PS as you. And best of all, it lets you optimize your armor so that you get the best possible stat distribution-all things you cannot otherwise do in Destiny 2. It lets you make loadouts and allows you to quickly swap between them whenever you want. Let me say this clear: even if you type the user/password on a browser-like screen, the app has access to what you've typed because they need it in order to download the cookies from (Bungie could make this safer by properly implementing OAuth). We know that Guardians want to spent the least amount of time possible navigating through their inventory to equip or transfer items. players rejoice, for the Destiny Item Manager is now working with the sequel Basically functionality is there, and the app creators are working hard to make. Destiny Item Manager brings your vault with you wherever you go in the solar system. Managers that are not browser extensions (typically native iOS and Android apps) do need your Sony/Microsoft user and password. However, as any browser extension, it now has access to every single cookie you have and, theoretically, can even log the keys you type while using the browser. The main reason I am posting this text is because I have not seeing a single reply with some of the details that I used to decided what to do.Ī browser extension like Destiny Item Manager for Chrome simply uses the cookies that your browser gets when you authenticate with so it never sees your username and password. ![]() Note: I will be repeating some words that were already written on replies. As everything these days, the answer is not simple -)
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