How can I stop being prompted to unlock the 'default' keyring on boot?What is “Unlock keyring” and how do I get rid of it?How to get rid of google chrome keyringThe login keyring did not get unlocked when you logged into your computerGoogle Chromium asks for keyring to unlock 14.04, but I don't want the password to be the same as my ubuntu loginUnlock Login Keyring problem - ubuntu 12.04 LTSHow to disable password prompt for default keyring?Automatic unlocking of keyring?Is there any way to get ubuntu 13.10 to stop asking for my passwordUnlock Login Keyring is coming everytime I am logging inHow to remove sign-in (password) fields when i boot up?An application asks to unlock the keyring on startup, but it doesn't say which oneHow to auto-unlock Keyring Manager?How to stop the keyring dialoug when opening ChromeAutomatically unlock other keyring than “Login” on login (not auto-login)

How (and if) to include name change for transgender person in genealogy?

Idiom for a situation or event that makes one poor or even poorer?

Limiting sensor input voltage without biasing measurement

What's that funny "illo" I keep hearing in Southern Spain?

Hebrew Vowels change the word

What fantasy book has twins (except one's blue) and a cloaked ice bear on the cover?

What are the branches of statistics?

How do I copy an installed steam game on my PC to an external hard drive?

How to prove that invoices are really unpaid?

Why is technology bad for children?

Are there 99 percentiles, or 100 percentiles? And are they groups of numbers, or dividers or pointers to individual numbers?

Proving the order of quaternion group is 8

Does my protagonist need to be the most important character?

How do I count the number of elements in a list which are between two determined values?

Why is Mars cold?

How can I communicate feelings to players without impacting their agency?

Does obfuscation give any measurable security benefit?

How to extract *.tgz.part-*?

Why are second inversion triads considered less consonant than first inversion triads?

Easy way of generating a 50-150W load @12V

Is the tap water in France safe to drink?

Does Darwin owe a debt to Hegel?

Interaction between casting spells and the Attack action

Did I Traumatize My Puppy?



How can I stop being prompted to unlock the 'default' keyring on boot?


What is “Unlock keyring” and how do I get rid of it?How to get rid of google chrome keyringThe login keyring did not get unlocked when you logged into your computerGoogle Chromium asks for keyring to unlock 14.04, but I don't want the password to be the same as my ubuntu loginUnlock Login Keyring problem - ubuntu 12.04 LTSHow to disable password prompt for default keyring?Automatic unlocking of keyring?Is there any way to get ubuntu 13.10 to stop asking for my passwordUnlock Login Keyring is coming everytime I am logging inHow to remove sign-in (password) fields when i boot up?An application asks to unlock the keyring on startup, but it doesn't say which oneHow to auto-unlock Keyring Manager?How to stop the keyring dialoug when opening ChromeAutomatically unlock other keyring than “Login” on login (not auto-login)






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty
margin-bottom:0;









276

















Whenever Ubuntu boots up, a dialogue pops up asking me to unlock my default keyring.



Is there some way this can unlock automatically through PAM or some other magical way?



enter image description here










share|improve this question
























  • 2





    See also: askubuntu.com/q/495957/178596

    – Wilf
    Dec 31 '14 at 7:49







  • 1





    This seems dangerous, is there not a way to hook into PAM to unlock via ssh-key?

    – MrMesees
    May 9 '17 at 17:39






  • 3





    I can't believe the top answers just amount to "remove your password". For real!?

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 8:58












  • @patrickvacek If you allow automated login, and want to automatically unlock the keyring, what use is a password?

    – Oli
    Apr 30 '18 at 9:24











  • The question does not specify automatic login, and using it is not something I'd recommend! But you are right, if you are using it, the rest of your passwords are worthless.

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 10:02

















276

















Whenever Ubuntu boots up, a dialogue pops up asking me to unlock my default keyring.



Is there some way this can unlock automatically through PAM or some other magical way?



enter image description here










share|improve this question
























  • 2





    See also: askubuntu.com/q/495957/178596

    – Wilf
    Dec 31 '14 at 7:49







  • 1





    This seems dangerous, is there not a way to hook into PAM to unlock via ssh-key?

    – MrMesees
    May 9 '17 at 17:39






  • 3





    I can't believe the top answers just amount to "remove your password". For real!?

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 8:58












  • @patrickvacek If you allow automated login, and want to automatically unlock the keyring, what use is a password?

    – Oli
    Apr 30 '18 at 9:24











  • The question does not specify automatic login, and using it is not something I'd recommend! But you are right, if you are using it, the rest of your passwords are worthless.

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 10:02













276












276








276


95






Whenever Ubuntu boots up, a dialogue pops up asking me to unlock my default keyring.



Is there some way this can unlock automatically through PAM or some other magical way?



enter image description here










share|improve this question

















Whenever Ubuntu boots up, a dialogue pops up asking me to unlock my default keyring.



Is there some way this can unlock automatically through PAM or some other magical way?



enter image description here







keyrings seahorse






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 12 '14 at 16:46







Oli

















asked Aug 4 '10 at 21:28









OliOli

231k95 gold badges589 silver badges780 bronze badges




231k95 gold badges589 silver badges780 bronze badges










  • 2





    See also: askubuntu.com/q/495957/178596

    – Wilf
    Dec 31 '14 at 7:49







  • 1





    This seems dangerous, is there not a way to hook into PAM to unlock via ssh-key?

    – MrMesees
    May 9 '17 at 17:39






  • 3





    I can't believe the top answers just amount to "remove your password". For real!?

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 8:58












  • @patrickvacek If you allow automated login, and want to automatically unlock the keyring, what use is a password?

    – Oli
    Apr 30 '18 at 9:24











  • The question does not specify automatic login, and using it is not something I'd recommend! But you are right, if you are using it, the rest of your passwords are worthless.

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 10:02












  • 2





    See also: askubuntu.com/q/495957/178596

    – Wilf
    Dec 31 '14 at 7:49







  • 1





    This seems dangerous, is there not a way to hook into PAM to unlock via ssh-key?

    – MrMesees
    May 9 '17 at 17:39






  • 3





    I can't believe the top answers just amount to "remove your password". For real!?

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 8:58












  • @patrickvacek If you allow automated login, and want to automatically unlock the keyring, what use is a password?

    – Oli
    Apr 30 '18 at 9:24











  • The question does not specify automatic login, and using it is not something I'd recommend! But you are right, if you are using it, the rest of your passwords are worthless.

    – patrickvacek
    Apr 30 '18 at 10:02







2




2





See also: askubuntu.com/q/495957/178596

– Wilf
Dec 31 '14 at 7:49






See also: askubuntu.com/q/495957/178596

– Wilf
Dec 31 '14 at 7:49





1




1





This seems dangerous, is there not a way to hook into PAM to unlock via ssh-key?

– MrMesees
May 9 '17 at 17:39





This seems dangerous, is there not a way to hook into PAM to unlock via ssh-key?

– MrMesees
May 9 '17 at 17:39




3




3





I can't believe the top answers just amount to "remove your password". For real!?

– patrickvacek
Apr 30 '18 at 8:58






I can't believe the top answers just amount to "remove your password". For real!?

– patrickvacek
Apr 30 '18 at 8:58














@patrickvacek If you allow automated login, and want to automatically unlock the keyring, what use is a password?

– Oli
Apr 30 '18 at 9:24





@patrickvacek If you allow automated login, and want to automatically unlock the keyring, what use is a password?

– Oli
Apr 30 '18 at 9:24













The question does not specify automatic login, and using it is not something I'd recommend! But you are right, if you are using it, the rest of your passwords are worthless.

– patrickvacek
Apr 30 '18 at 10:02





The question does not specify automatic login, and using it is not something I'd recommend! But you are right, if you are using it, the rest of your passwords are worthless.

– patrickvacek
Apr 30 '18 at 10:02










11 Answers
11






active

oldest

votes


















125


















Be warned that this will make your keyring accessible without a password. Period. You don't have to be logged in to view it



With that being said,



I think the simplest way is to set the password for the keyring to an empty password -- you will not be prompted for a password then:



  1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys

  2. Right-click on the "login" keyring

  3. Select "Change password"

  4. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

  5. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".

Again, as the message says: This will expose all your passwords (e.g. email passwords) that you chose to save in the default keyring to anyone using your computer or having access to your files and is therefore not recommended.



Addendum for Ubuntu 11.04:



  • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu logo in the top left corner, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


  • In the classic session the path to start the application has changed to System → Preferences → Password and Encryption Keys


Addendum for Ubuntu 11.10:



  • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu launcher (the first item) in the Unity launcher bar on the left side, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


  • In the classic session (from the gnome-session-fallback package) the path to start the application has again changed to Applications → Other → Password and Encryption Keys






share|improve this answer




























  • Thanks for the tip, also Password and Encryption keys have moved to System > Preferences in 11.04

    – Drew
    Jun 30 '11 at 15:54











  • how to on 12.04?

    – Fanoy
    Apr 5 '12 at 19:00






  • 1





    Mac OSX encrypts the passwords, but still manages to auto-login. Keys are protected 'as usual' when logged in. The only additional threat is loosing physical access to your computer. Will Ubuntu provide a similar feature in the future?

    – user24668
    May 11 '12 at 8:12






  • 5





    After a few restarts the popup comes back again.. I have changed the password to blank about 100 times by now.. but after every few restarts this idiotic and annoying popup comes up again.. I hate it..

    – Muhammad bin Yusrat
    Aug 21 '15 at 11:57






  • 1





    doesn't work... where is "Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys"???? it doesn't exist

    – Nicolas S.Xu
    Mar 15 at 14:20


















58







+50











For Ubuntu 12.10 and onwards



The interface of the "Password and Keyring" manager changed slightly in 12.10. When you open it, you won't immediately see the "Login" keyring as described in other answers. The interface will look like this:



enter image description here



In order to view the Login keyring, you need to open the View menu, and choose By Keyring. Once that's done, your interface will look like this:



enter image description here



Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:



enter image description here



Leave this blank, choose "Continue", and choose it again to confirm you desire to continue without a password.






share|improve this answer























  • 2





    Perfect, this applies to 13.04.

    – Gabriel
    May 5 '13 at 22:47











  • "Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:" Bold font to highlight the query i have which is how to if can not do as described due to seahorse using different password from the one which is used to log on desktop session. Asked this q askubuntu.com/q/328347/102029. Vote to reopen please...

    – geezanansa
    Aug 10 '13 at 2:41






  • 1





    Worked Ok for 13.10

    – netimen
    Feb 5 '14 at 13:17











  • Setting a blank password causes gnome-shell to crash.

    – Jamie
    Jan 11 '17 at 18:51


















40







+100











For versions up to 12.04: (for 12.10 onwards, see this answer)



The method is similar to previous Ubuntu versions, but I also include a command-live alternative at the end.



1. Using the Gnome Keyring Manager (Seahorse)




  • Press Alt+F2, type seahorse and press Enter to start the Gnome Keyring Manager:



    enter image description here



  • Alternately, open a terminal with Ctrl+F2+T, type seahorse & and press Enter.



  • The "Passwords and Keys" window should come up as shown below. Under the Passwords tab, select login, right-click on it, and then click on Change Password:



    enter image description here




  • The "Change Keyring Password" box will come up. Type your old password, and then leave the new/confirm password fields blank. Then press OK, and the information box shown below will pop-up; read it, and then click on Use Unsafe Storage to not have to enter your password at each login:



    enter image description here



  • Close the keyring manager. After you log out/reboot, you won't be asked for your password any more.


2. Disable the login keyring password from the command-line



As an alternative to all the above steps, simply open a terminal, and type/paste the below, changing MYPASSWORD to whatever your current password is; that's it!




python -c "import gnomekeyring;gnomekeyring.change_password_sync('login', 'MYPASSWORD', '');"





share|improve this answer























  • 3





    For the 1st part this is my "seahorse" application window !! No sign of any passwords tabs. So the 1st part is not valid However, for the 2nd part. This was the amazing soultion. No more annoying "keyring" Thanks :)

    – Suhaib
    Sep 15 '12 at 0:30











  • Command-line is a workaround on Ubuntu 14.04 since it make gnome crash when trying to set an empty password to Login keyring.

    – Giovanni Toraldo
    Nov 9 '14 at 8:49











  • +1 for cli example. I'm on Xbuntu and this was the only applicable fix. While Xbuntu was able to shed all the weirdo GUI stuff, the keyring clung still...

    – Chris K
    Dec 10 '14 at 3:49











  • Thanks. After I installed seahorse and followed your instructions the pop-up stopped to appear. It appeared each time I ran remmina. Using Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS

    – ka3ak
    Jul 18 at 18:42


















16


















Simply delete your default keyring. (Backup the passwords first!) You don't need it. You can keep all your keys in the login keyring.



The login keyring is unlocked when you login. All keys in it will be available, you don't have to enter more passwords again.



If you are using auto-login, then when you want to access something that needs a key from the login keyring you will be prompted for the password, of course, but only once.



(As many answers already pointed out) your keyrings are in System / Preferences / Passwords and Encryption Keys






share|improve this answer

































    11


















    You need to get the password for your login key ring to be the same as your normal login password.



    To do this follow the path:



    Open Applications > Accessories > Passwords and Encryption Keys


    You will see under the passwords tab a list of keyrings. One should be called



    "Passwords: login"



    Click on the + and you should see a list of accounts that require passwords such as you Gwibber details, Evolution passwords etc.



    This means when you log in all of these accounts will be unlocked by this login keyring.



    To get the keyring to unlock when you log into Ubuntu, right click on "Passwords: login" and choose "Change Password"



    You will then need to enter your current keyring password and set your new keyring password to be the same as your normal login password.



    To test: Log out, log back in and open Evolution to prove that this has worked.






    share|improve this answer























    • 2





      I think this only works when you're not set to automatically log in.

      – Matthew
      Aug 13 '10 at 19:37






    • 2





      It didn't work for me. Deleting the default keyring neither. It really sucks.

      – e-satis
      Oct 15 '10 at 11:07






    • 2





      Just to note that on Ubuntu 14.04 you can get to the Passwords and Encryption Keys window mentioned above by running the command seahorse from the command line (or searching for seahorse and then clicking on "passwords and keys")

      – eric
      Nov 12 '15 at 11:27











    • I tried multiple times and when I'm about to run back to windows, I decided to try putting different password on "login" and the "default" keyring. Then I just tip the "unlock the keyring every time you login"

      – egotopia
      Jan 24 '16 at 23:51


















    9


















    Use this if you have forgotten the old password and is ok to delete items in the old keyring, but want to safeguard new keyring with matching password.



    For Ubuntu 14.04, I used the following.



    Remove old keyring:



    cd .local/share/keyrings/
    rm *.keyring


    Restart the system to have the new keyring created:



    sudo shutdown -r now


    Verify the new keyring exists:



    cd .local/share/keyrings/
    ls -ltr *.keyring





    share|improve this answer




























    • It works for me.

      – yAnTar
      Aug 31 '17 at 12:32


















    8


















    Using Ubuntu 11.10 with Unity:



    1. Open "Passwords and Keys" application

    2. In the Passwords tab, right click on the password icon

    3. Select "Change Password"

    4. Enter your current password as the "Old Password"

    5. Leave the "New Password" and "Confirm" fields empty

    6. Click "Ok"

    7. Confirm to "Use Unsafe Storage"

    Hope that works for you






    share|improve this answer




























    • Yes, I can confirm this working.

      – c0de
      Nov 17 '11 at 19:18


















    1


















    For Ubuntu 13.10:



    1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys


    2. Click View -> "By keyring"


    3. Right-click on the "login" keyring


    4. Select "Change password"


    5. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

    6. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".





    share|improve this answer

































      1


















      This is what works



      Create a desktop entry in Notepad/Mousepad



      [Desktop Entry]
      Version=1.0
      Type=Application
      Name=Google Chrome
      Comment=
      Exec=google-chrome --password-store=basic
      Icon=google-chrome
      Path=
      Terminal=false
      StartupNotify=false


      Call it Google Chrome.desktop



      Now just a matter of running our newly created Shortcut which launches
      Chrome without any interruptions!






      share|improve this answer

































        0


















        I have solved this problem through terminal.There is a directory under /usr/lib , called gnome-keyring. Under that directory there are a directory 'devel' and two files gnome-keyring-prompt and gnome-keyring-prompt-3.I don't know much about the directory 'devel'.So I removed only the two files and solved the problem.The corresponding commands are here-



        cd /usr/lib/gnome-keyring


        Then



        sudo rm gnome-keyring-prompt gnome-keyring-prompt-3


        And then reboot your computer to see the effect.






        share|improve this answer

































          -2


















          open passwords and keys then



          enter image description here



          enter image description here



          Then you need to enter your current password (old password). Don't enter any password for your new one, or leave it blank.



          You need to confirm that you will store unencrypted password. If you are sure that it is what you want, then just click "Use Unsafe Storage" button.






          share|improve this answer


























          • yeah sure i am talking about 12.04

            – user61928
            Sep 15 '12 at 9:43










          protected by Community Jan 24 '12 at 15:47



          Thank you for your interest in this question.
          Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



          Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














          11 Answers
          11






          active

          oldest

          votes








          11 Answers
          11






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          125


















          Be warned that this will make your keyring accessible without a password. Period. You don't have to be logged in to view it



          With that being said,



          I think the simplest way is to set the password for the keyring to an empty password -- you will not be prompted for a password then:



          1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys

          2. Right-click on the "login" keyring

          3. Select "Change password"

          4. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

          5. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".

          Again, as the message says: This will expose all your passwords (e.g. email passwords) that you chose to save in the default keyring to anyone using your computer or having access to your files and is therefore not recommended.



          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.04:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu logo in the top left corner, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session the path to start the application has changed to System → Preferences → Password and Encryption Keys


          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.10:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu launcher (the first item) in the Unity launcher bar on the left side, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session (from the gnome-session-fallback package) the path to start the application has again changed to Applications → Other → Password and Encryption Keys






          share|improve this answer




























          • Thanks for the tip, also Password and Encryption keys have moved to System > Preferences in 11.04

            – Drew
            Jun 30 '11 at 15:54











          • how to on 12.04?

            – Fanoy
            Apr 5 '12 at 19:00






          • 1





            Mac OSX encrypts the passwords, but still manages to auto-login. Keys are protected 'as usual' when logged in. The only additional threat is loosing physical access to your computer. Will Ubuntu provide a similar feature in the future?

            – user24668
            May 11 '12 at 8:12






          • 5





            After a few restarts the popup comes back again.. I have changed the password to blank about 100 times by now.. but after every few restarts this idiotic and annoying popup comes up again.. I hate it..

            – Muhammad bin Yusrat
            Aug 21 '15 at 11:57






          • 1





            doesn't work... where is "Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys"???? it doesn't exist

            – Nicolas S.Xu
            Mar 15 at 14:20















          125


















          Be warned that this will make your keyring accessible without a password. Period. You don't have to be logged in to view it



          With that being said,



          I think the simplest way is to set the password for the keyring to an empty password -- you will not be prompted for a password then:



          1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys

          2. Right-click on the "login" keyring

          3. Select "Change password"

          4. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

          5. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".

          Again, as the message says: This will expose all your passwords (e.g. email passwords) that you chose to save in the default keyring to anyone using your computer or having access to your files and is therefore not recommended.



          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.04:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu logo in the top left corner, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session the path to start the application has changed to System → Preferences → Password and Encryption Keys


          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.10:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu launcher (the first item) in the Unity launcher bar on the left side, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session (from the gnome-session-fallback package) the path to start the application has again changed to Applications → Other → Password and Encryption Keys






          share|improve this answer




























          • Thanks for the tip, also Password and Encryption keys have moved to System > Preferences in 11.04

            – Drew
            Jun 30 '11 at 15:54











          • how to on 12.04?

            – Fanoy
            Apr 5 '12 at 19:00






          • 1





            Mac OSX encrypts the passwords, but still manages to auto-login. Keys are protected 'as usual' when logged in. The only additional threat is loosing physical access to your computer. Will Ubuntu provide a similar feature in the future?

            – user24668
            May 11 '12 at 8:12






          • 5





            After a few restarts the popup comes back again.. I have changed the password to blank about 100 times by now.. but after every few restarts this idiotic and annoying popup comes up again.. I hate it..

            – Muhammad bin Yusrat
            Aug 21 '15 at 11:57






          • 1





            doesn't work... where is "Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys"???? it doesn't exist

            – Nicolas S.Xu
            Mar 15 at 14:20













          125














          125










          125









          Be warned that this will make your keyring accessible without a password. Period. You don't have to be logged in to view it



          With that being said,



          I think the simplest way is to set the password for the keyring to an empty password -- you will not be prompted for a password then:



          1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys

          2. Right-click on the "login" keyring

          3. Select "Change password"

          4. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

          5. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".

          Again, as the message says: This will expose all your passwords (e.g. email passwords) that you chose to save in the default keyring to anyone using your computer or having access to your files and is therefore not recommended.



          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.04:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu logo in the top left corner, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session the path to start the application has changed to System → Preferences → Password and Encryption Keys


          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.10:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu launcher (the first item) in the Unity launcher bar on the left side, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session (from the gnome-session-fallback package) the path to start the application has again changed to Applications → Other → Password and Encryption Keys






          share|improve this answer
















          Be warned that this will make your keyring accessible without a password. Period. You don't have to be logged in to view it



          With that being said,



          I think the simplest way is to set the password for the keyring to an empty password -- you will not be prompted for a password then:



          1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys

          2. Right-click on the "login" keyring

          3. Select "Change password"

          4. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

          5. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".

          Again, as the message says: This will expose all your passwords (e.g. email passwords) that you chose to save in the default keyring to anyone using your computer or having access to your files and is therefore not recommended.



          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.04:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu logo in the top left corner, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session the path to start the application has changed to System → Preferences → Password and Encryption Keys


          Addendum for Ubuntu 11.10:



          • In the default Unity session, you can start the application by clicking on the Ubuntu launcher (the first item) in the Unity launcher bar on the left side, then typing Password, and selecting Password and Encryption Keys from the search result.


          • In the classic session (from the gnome-session-fallback package) the path to start the application has again changed to Applications → Other → Password and Encryption Keys







          share|improve this answer















          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 3 '11 at 10:10









          htorque

          49.3k33 gold badges179 silver badges213 bronze badges




          49.3k33 gold badges179 silver badges213 bronze badges










          answered Aug 4 '10 at 21:44









          Marcel StimbergMarcel Stimberg

          28.4k7 gold badges41 silver badges44 bronze badges




          28.4k7 gold badges41 silver badges44 bronze badges















          • Thanks for the tip, also Password and Encryption keys have moved to System > Preferences in 11.04

            – Drew
            Jun 30 '11 at 15:54











          • how to on 12.04?

            – Fanoy
            Apr 5 '12 at 19:00






          • 1





            Mac OSX encrypts the passwords, but still manages to auto-login. Keys are protected 'as usual' when logged in. The only additional threat is loosing physical access to your computer. Will Ubuntu provide a similar feature in the future?

            – user24668
            May 11 '12 at 8:12






          • 5





            After a few restarts the popup comes back again.. I have changed the password to blank about 100 times by now.. but after every few restarts this idiotic and annoying popup comes up again.. I hate it..

            – Muhammad bin Yusrat
            Aug 21 '15 at 11:57






          • 1





            doesn't work... where is "Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys"???? it doesn't exist

            – Nicolas S.Xu
            Mar 15 at 14:20

















          • Thanks for the tip, also Password and Encryption keys have moved to System > Preferences in 11.04

            – Drew
            Jun 30 '11 at 15:54











          • how to on 12.04?

            – Fanoy
            Apr 5 '12 at 19:00






          • 1





            Mac OSX encrypts the passwords, but still manages to auto-login. Keys are protected 'as usual' when logged in. The only additional threat is loosing physical access to your computer. Will Ubuntu provide a similar feature in the future?

            – user24668
            May 11 '12 at 8:12






          • 5





            After a few restarts the popup comes back again.. I have changed the password to blank about 100 times by now.. but after every few restarts this idiotic and annoying popup comes up again.. I hate it..

            – Muhammad bin Yusrat
            Aug 21 '15 at 11:57






          • 1





            doesn't work... where is "Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys"???? it doesn't exist

            – Nicolas S.Xu
            Mar 15 at 14:20
















          Thanks for the tip, also Password and Encryption keys have moved to System > Preferences in 11.04

          – Drew
          Jun 30 '11 at 15:54





          Thanks for the tip, also Password and Encryption keys have moved to System > Preferences in 11.04

          – Drew
          Jun 30 '11 at 15:54













          how to on 12.04?

          – Fanoy
          Apr 5 '12 at 19:00





          how to on 12.04?

          – Fanoy
          Apr 5 '12 at 19:00




          1




          1





          Mac OSX encrypts the passwords, but still manages to auto-login. Keys are protected 'as usual' when logged in. The only additional threat is loosing physical access to your computer. Will Ubuntu provide a similar feature in the future?

          – user24668
          May 11 '12 at 8:12





          Mac OSX encrypts the passwords, but still manages to auto-login. Keys are protected 'as usual' when logged in. The only additional threat is loosing physical access to your computer. Will Ubuntu provide a similar feature in the future?

          – user24668
          May 11 '12 at 8:12




          5




          5





          After a few restarts the popup comes back again.. I have changed the password to blank about 100 times by now.. but after every few restarts this idiotic and annoying popup comes up again.. I hate it..

          – Muhammad bin Yusrat
          Aug 21 '15 at 11:57





          After a few restarts the popup comes back again.. I have changed the password to blank about 100 times by now.. but after every few restarts this idiotic and annoying popup comes up again.. I hate it..

          – Muhammad bin Yusrat
          Aug 21 '15 at 11:57




          1




          1





          doesn't work... where is "Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys"???? it doesn't exist

          – Nicolas S.Xu
          Mar 15 at 14:20





          doesn't work... where is "Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys"???? it doesn't exist

          – Nicolas S.Xu
          Mar 15 at 14:20













          58







          +50











          For Ubuntu 12.10 and onwards



          The interface of the "Password and Keyring" manager changed slightly in 12.10. When you open it, you won't immediately see the "Login" keyring as described in other answers. The interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          In order to view the Login keyring, you need to open the View menu, and choose By Keyring. Once that's done, your interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:



          enter image description here



          Leave this blank, choose "Continue", and choose it again to confirm you desire to continue without a password.






          share|improve this answer























          • 2





            Perfect, this applies to 13.04.

            – Gabriel
            May 5 '13 at 22:47











          • "Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:" Bold font to highlight the query i have which is how to if can not do as described due to seahorse using different password from the one which is used to log on desktop session. Asked this q askubuntu.com/q/328347/102029. Vote to reopen please...

            – geezanansa
            Aug 10 '13 at 2:41






          • 1





            Worked Ok for 13.10

            – netimen
            Feb 5 '14 at 13:17











          • Setting a blank password causes gnome-shell to crash.

            – Jamie
            Jan 11 '17 at 18:51















          58







          +50











          For Ubuntu 12.10 and onwards



          The interface of the "Password and Keyring" manager changed slightly in 12.10. When you open it, you won't immediately see the "Login" keyring as described in other answers. The interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          In order to view the Login keyring, you need to open the View menu, and choose By Keyring. Once that's done, your interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:



          enter image description here



          Leave this blank, choose "Continue", and choose it again to confirm you desire to continue without a password.






          share|improve this answer























          • 2





            Perfect, this applies to 13.04.

            – Gabriel
            May 5 '13 at 22:47











          • "Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:" Bold font to highlight the query i have which is how to if can not do as described due to seahorse using different password from the one which is used to log on desktop session. Asked this q askubuntu.com/q/328347/102029. Vote to reopen please...

            – geezanansa
            Aug 10 '13 at 2:41






          • 1





            Worked Ok for 13.10

            – netimen
            Feb 5 '14 at 13:17











          • Setting a blank password causes gnome-shell to crash.

            – Jamie
            Jan 11 '17 at 18:51













          58







          +50







          58







          +50



          58






          +50





          For Ubuntu 12.10 and onwards



          The interface of the "Password and Keyring" manager changed slightly in 12.10. When you open it, you won't immediately see the "Login" keyring as described in other answers. The interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          In order to view the Login keyring, you need to open the View menu, and choose By Keyring. Once that's done, your interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:



          enter image description here



          Leave this blank, choose "Continue", and choose it again to confirm you desire to continue without a password.






          share|improve this answer
















          For Ubuntu 12.10 and onwards



          The interface of the "Password and Keyring" manager changed slightly in 12.10. When you open it, you won't immediately see the "Login" keyring as described in other answers. The interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          In order to view the Login keyring, you need to open the View menu, and choose By Keyring. Once that's done, your interface will look like this:



          enter image description here



          Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:



          enter image description here



          Leave this blank, choose "Continue", and choose it again to confirm you desire to continue without a password.







          share|improve this answer















          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 24 '13 at 10:21

























          answered Dec 2 '12 at 22:19







          user2405

















          • 2





            Perfect, this applies to 13.04.

            – Gabriel
            May 5 '13 at 22:47











          • "Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:" Bold font to highlight the query i have which is how to if can not do as described due to seahorse using different password from the one which is used to log on desktop session. Asked this q askubuntu.com/q/328347/102029. Vote to reopen please...

            – geezanansa
            Aug 10 '13 at 2:41






          • 1





            Worked Ok for 13.10

            – netimen
            Feb 5 '14 at 13:17











          • Setting a blank password causes gnome-shell to crash.

            – Jamie
            Jan 11 '17 at 18:51












          • 2





            Perfect, this applies to 13.04.

            – Gabriel
            May 5 '13 at 22:47











          • "Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:" Bold font to highlight the query i have which is how to if can not do as described due to seahorse using different password from the one which is used to log on desktop session. Asked this q askubuntu.com/q/328347/102029. Vote to reopen please...

            – geezanansa
            Aug 10 '13 at 2:41






          • 1





            Worked Ok for 13.10

            – netimen
            Feb 5 '14 at 13:17











          • Setting a blank password causes gnome-shell to crash.

            – Jamie
            Jan 11 '17 at 18:51







          2




          2





          Perfect, this applies to 13.04.

          – Gabriel
          May 5 '13 at 22:47





          Perfect, this applies to 13.04.

          – Gabriel
          May 5 '13 at 22:47













          "Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:" Bold font to highlight the query i have which is how to if can not do as described due to seahorse using different password from the one which is used to log on desktop session. Asked this q askubuntu.com/q/328347/102029. Vote to reopen please...

          – geezanansa
          Aug 10 '13 at 2:41





          "Right-click on the "Login" entry at the top and choose Change Password. You'll need to enter the current password, which should be your user account password, before continuing. When you do that, you'll get a dialog where you will be asked to enter the new password twice:" Bold font to highlight the query i have which is how to if can not do as described due to seahorse using different password from the one which is used to log on desktop session. Asked this q askubuntu.com/q/328347/102029. Vote to reopen please...

          – geezanansa
          Aug 10 '13 at 2:41




          1




          1





          Worked Ok for 13.10

          – netimen
          Feb 5 '14 at 13:17





          Worked Ok for 13.10

          – netimen
          Feb 5 '14 at 13:17













          Setting a blank password causes gnome-shell to crash.

          – Jamie
          Jan 11 '17 at 18:51





          Setting a blank password causes gnome-shell to crash.

          – Jamie
          Jan 11 '17 at 18:51











          40







          +100











          For versions up to 12.04: (for 12.10 onwards, see this answer)



          The method is similar to previous Ubuntu versions, but I also include a command-live alternative at the end.



          1. Using the Gnome Keyring Manager (Seahorse)




          • Press Alt+F2, type seahorse and press Enter to start the Gnome Keyring Manager:



            enter image description here



          • Alternately, open a terminal with Ctrl+F2+T, type seahorse & and press Enter.



          • The "Passwords and Keys" window should come up as shown below. Under the Passwords tab, select login, right-click on it, and then click on Change Password:



            enter image description here




          • The "Change Keyring Password" box will come up. Type your old password, and then leave the new/confirm password fields blank. Then press OK, and the information box shown below will pop-up; read it, and then click on Use Unsafe Storage to not have to enter your password at each login:



            enter image description here



          • Close the keyring manager. After you log out/reboot, you won't be asked for your password any more.


          2. Disable the login keyring password from the command-line



          As an alternative to all the above steps, simply open a terminal, and type/paste the below, changing MYPASSWORD to whatever your current password is; that's it!




          python -c "import gnomekeyring;gnomekeyring.change_password_sync('login', 'MYPASSWORD', '');"





          share|improve this answer























          • 3





            For the 1st part this is my "seahorse" application window !! No sign of any passwords tabs. So the 1st part is not valid However, for the 2nd part. This was the amazing soultion. No more annoying "keyring" Thanks :)

            – Suhaib
            Sep 15 '12 at 0:30











          • Command-line is a workaround on Ubuntu 14.04 since it make gnome crash when trying to set an empty password to Login keyring.

            – Giovanni Toraldo
            Nov 9 '14 at 8:49











          • +1 for cli example. I'm on Xbuntu and this was the only applicable fix. While Xbuntu was able to shed all the weirdo GUI stuff, the keyring clung still...

            – Chris K
            Dec 10 '14 at 3:49











          • Thanks. After I installed seahorse and followed your instructions the pop-up stopped to appear. It appeared each time I ran remmina. Using Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS

            – ka3ak
            Jul 18 at 18:42















          40







          +100











          For versions up to 12.04: (for 12.10 onwards, see this answer)



          The method is similar to previous Ubuntu versions, but I also include a command-live alternative at the end.



          1. Using the Gnome Keyring Manager (Seahorse)




          • Press Alt+F2, type seahorse and press Enter to start the Gnome Keyring Manager:



            enter image description here



          • Alternately, open a terminal with Ctrl+F2+T, type seahorse & and press Enter.



          • The "Passwords and Keys" window should come up as shown below. Under the Passwords tab, select login, right-click on it, and then click on Change Password:



            enter image description here




          • The "Change Keyring Password" box will come up. Type your old password, and then leave the new/confirm password fields blank. Then press OK, and the information box shown below will pop-up; read it, and then click on Use Unsafe Storage to not have to enter your password at each login:



            enter image description here



          • Close the keyring manager. After you log out/reboot, you won't be asked for your password any more.


          2. Disable the login keyring password from the command-line



          As an alternative to all the above steps, simply open a terminal, and type/paste the below, changing MYPASSWORD to whatever your current password is; that's it!




          python -c "import gnomekeyring;gnomekeyring.change_password_sync('login', 'MYPASSWORD', '');"





          share|improve this answer























          • 3





            For the 1st part this is my "seahorse" application window !! No sign of any passwords tabs. So the 1st part is not valid However, for the 2nd part. This was the amazing soultion. No more annoying "keyring" Thanks :)

            – Suhaib
            Sep 15 '12 at 0:30











          • Command-line is a workaround on Ubuntu 14.04 since it make gnome crash when trying to set an empty password to Login keyring.

            – Giovanni Toraldo
            Nov 9 '14 at 8:49











          • +1 for cli example. I'm on Xbuntu and this was the only applicable fix. While Xbuntu was able to shed all the weirdo GUI stuff, the keyring clung still...

            – Chris K
            Dec 10 '14 at 3:49











          • Thanks. After I installed seahorse and followed your instructions the pop-up stopped to appear. It appeared each time I ran remmina. Using Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS

            – ka3ak
            Jul 18 at 18:42













          40







          +100







          40







          +100



          40






          +100





          For versions up to 12.04: (for 12.10 onwards, see this answer)



          The method is similar to previous Ubuntu versions, but I also include a command-live alternative at the end.



          1. Using the Gnome Keyring Manager (Seahorse)




          • Press Alt+F2, type seahorse and press Enter to start the Gnome Keyring Manager:



            enter image description here



          • Alternately, open a terminal with Ctrl+F2+T, type seahorse & and press Enter.



          • The "Passwords and Keys" window should come up as shown below. Under the Passwords tab, select login, right-click on it, and then click on Change Password:



            enter image description here




          • The "Change Keyring Password" box will come up. Type your old password, and then leave the new/confirm password fields blank. Then press OK, and the information box shown below will pop-up; read it, and then click on Use Unsafe Storage to not have to enter your password at each login:



            enter image description here



          • Close the keyring manager. After you log out/reboot, you won't be asked for your password any more.


          2. Disable the login keyring password from the command-line



          As an alternative to all the above steps, simply open a terminal, and type/paste the below, changing MYPASSWORD to whatever your current password is; that's it!




          python -c "import gnomekeyring;gnomekeyring.change_password_sync('login', 'MYPASSWORD', '');"





          share|improve this answer
















          For versions up to 12.04: (for 12.10 onwards, see this answer)



          The method is similar to previous Ubuntu versions, but I also include a command-live alternative at the end.



          1. Using the Gnome Keyring Manager (Seahorse)




          • Press Alt+F2, type seahorse and press Enter to start the Gnome Keyring Manager:



            enter image description here



          • Alternately, open a terminal with Ctrl+F2+T, type seahorse & and press Enter.



          • The "Passwords and Keys" window should come up as shown below. Under the Passwords tab, select login, right-click on it, and then click on Change Password:



            enter image description here




          • The "Change Keyring Password" box will come up. Type your old password, and then leave the new/confirm password fields blank. Then press OK, and the information box shown below will pop-up; read it, and then click on Use Unsafe Storage to not have to enter your password at each login:



            enter image description here



          • Close the keyring manager. After you log out/reboot, you won't be asked for your password any more.


          2. Disable the login keyring password from the command-line



          As an alternative to all the above steps, simply open a terminal, and type/paste the below, changing MYPASSWORD to whatever your current password is; that's it!




          python -c "import gnomekeyring;gnomekeyring.change_password_sync('login', 'MYPASSWORD', '');"






          share|improve this answer















          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:25









          Community

          1




          1










          answered Sep 14 '12 at 12:38









          ishish

          120k35 gold badges278 silver badges297 bronze badges




          120k35 gold badges278 silver badges297 bronze badges










          • 3





            For the 1st part this is my "seahorse" application window !! No sign of any passwords tabs. So the 1st part is not valid However, for the 2nd part. This was the amazing soultion. No more annoying "keyring" Thanks :)

            – Suhaib
            Sep 15 '12 at 0:30











          • Command-line is a workaround on Ubuntu 14.04 since it make gnome crash when trying to set an empty password to Login keyring.

            – Giovanni Toraldo
            Nov 9 '14 at 8:49











          • +1 for cli example. I'm on Xbuntu and this was the only applicable fix. While Xbuntu was able to shed all the weirdo GUI stuff, the keyring clung still...

            – Chris K
            Dec 10 '14 at 3:49











          • Thanks. After I installed seahorse and followed your instructions the pop-up stopped to appear. It appeared each time I ran remmina. Using Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS

            – ka3ak
            Jul 18 at 18:42












          • 3





            For the 1st part this is my "seahorse" application window !! No sign of any passwords tabs. So the 1st part is not valid However, for the 2nd part. This was the amazing soultion. No more annoying "keyring" Thanks :)

            – Suhaib
            Sep 15 '12 at 0:30











          • Command-line is a workaround on Ubuntu 14.04 since it make gnome crash when trying to set an empty password to Login keyring.

            – Giovanni Toraldo
            Nov 9 '14 at 8:49











          • +1 for cli example. I'm on Xbuntu and this was the only applicable fix. While Xbuntu was able to shed all the weirdo GUI stuff, the keyring clung still...

            – Chris K
            Dec 10 '14 at 3:49











          • Thanks. After I installed seahorse and followed your instructions the pop-up stopped to appear. It appeared each time I ran remmina. Using Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS

            – ka3ak
            Jul 18 at 18:42







          3




          3





          For the 1st part this is my "seahorse" application window !! No sign of any passwords tabs. So the 1st part is not valid However, for the 2nd part. This was the amazing soultion. No more annoying "keyring" Thanks :)

          – Suhaib
          Sep 15 '12 at 0:30





          For the 1st part this is my "seahorse" application window !! No sign of any passwords tabs. So the 1st part is not valid However, for the 2nd part. This was the amazing soultion. No more annoying "keyring" Thanks :)

          – Suhaib
          Sep 15 '12 at 0:30













          Command-line is a workaround on Ubuntu 14.04 since it make gnome crash when trying to set an empty password to Login keyring.

          – Giovanni Toraldo
          Nov 9 '14 at 8:49





          Command-line is a workaround on Ubuntu 14.04 since it make gnome crash when trying to set an empty password to Login keyring.

          – Giovanni Toraldo
          Nov 9 '14 at 8:49













          +1 for cli example. I'm on Xbuntu and this was the only applicable fix. While Xbuntu was able to shed all the weirdo GUI stuff, the keyring clung still...

          – Chris K
          Dec 10 '14 at 3:49





          +1 for cli example. I'm on Xbuntu and this was the only applicable fix. While Xbuntu was able to shed all the weirdo GUI stuff, the keyring clung still...

          – Chris K
          Dec 10 '14 at 3:49













          Thanks. After I installed seahorse and followed your instructions the pop-up stopped to appear. It appeared each time I ran remmina. Using Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS

          – ka3ak
          Jul 18 at 18:42





          Thanks. After I installed seahorse and followed your instructions the pop-up stopped to appear. It appeared each time I ran remmina. Using Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS

          – ka3ak
          Jul 18 at 18:42











          16


















          Simply delete your default keyring. (Backup the passwords first!) You don't need it. You can keep all your keys in the login keyring.



          The login keyring is unlocked when you login. All keys in it will be available, you don't have to enter more passwords again.



          If you are using auto-login, then when you want to access something that needs a key from the login keyring you will be prompted for the password, of course, but only once.



          (As many answers already pointed out) your keyrings are in System / Preferences / Passwords and Encryption Keys






          share|improve this answer






























            16


















            Simply delete your default keyring. (Backup the passwords first!) You don't need it. You can keep all your keys in the login keyring.



            The login keyring is unlocked when you login. All keys in it will be available, you don't have to enter more passwords again.



            If you are using auto-login, then when you want to access something that needs a key from the login keyring you will be prompted for the password, of course, but only once.



            (As many answers already pointed out) your keyrings are in System / Preferences / Passwords and Encryption Keys






            share|improve this answer




























              16














              16










              16









              Simply delete your default keyring. (Backup the passwords first!) You don't need it. You can keep all your keys in the login keyring.



              The login keyring is unlocked when you login. All keys in it will be available, you don't have to enter more passwords again.



              If you are using auto-login, then when you want to access something that needs a key from the login keyring you will be prompted for the password, of course, but only once.



              (As many answers already pointed out) your keyrings are in System / Preferences / Passwords and Encryption Keys






              share|improve this answer














              Simply delete your default keyring. (Backup the passwords first!) You don't need it. You can keep all your keys in the login keyring.



              The login keyring is unlocked when you login. All keys in it will be available, you don't have to enter more passwords again.



              If you are using auto-login, then when you want to access something that needs a key from the login keyring you will be prompted for the password, of course, but only once.



              (As many answers already pointed out) your keyrings are in System / Preferences / Passwords and Encryption Keys







              share|improve this answer













              share|improve this answer




              share|improve this answer










              answered Apr 17 '12 at 15:43









              janosjanos

              3,97616 silver badges47 bronze badges




              3,97616 silver badges47 bronze badges
























                  11


















                  You need to get the password for your login key ring to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To do this follow the path:



                  Open Applications > Accessories > Passwords and Encryption Keys


                  You will see under the passwords tab a list of keyrings. One should be called



                  "Passwords: login"



                  Click on the + and you should see a list of accounts that require passwords such as you Gwibber details, Evolution passwords etc.



                  This means when you log in all of these accounts will be unlocked by this login keyring.



                  To get the keyring to unlock when you log into Ubuntu, right click on "Passwords: login" and choose "Change Password"



                  You will then need to enter your current keyring password and set your new keyring password to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To test: Log out, log back in and open Evolution to prove that this has worked.






                  share|improve this answer























                  • 2





                    I think this only works when you're not set to automatically log in.

                    – Matthew
                    Aug 13 '10 at 19:37






                  • 2





                    It didn't work for me. Deleting the default keyring neither. It really sucks.

                    – e-satis
                    Oct 15 '10 at 11:07






                  • 2





                    Just to note that on Ubuntu 14.04 you can get to the Passwords and Encryption Keys window mentioned above by running the command seahorse from the command line (or searching for seahorse and then clicking on "passwords and keys")

                    – eric
                    Nov 12 '15 at 11:27











                  • I tried multiple times and when I'm about to run back to windows, I decided to try putting different password on "login" and the "default" keyring. Then I just tip the "unlock the keyring every time you login"

                    – egotopia
                    Jan 24 '16 at 23:51















                  11


















                  You need to get the password for your login key ring to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To do this follow the path:



                  Open Applications > Accessories > Passwords and Encryption Keys


                  You will see under the passwords tab a list of keyrings. One should be called



                  "Passwords: login"



                  Click on the + and you should see a list of accounts that require passwords such as you Gwibber details, Evolution passwords etc.



                  This means when you log in all of these accounts will be unlocked by this login keyring.



                  To get the keyring to unlock when you log into Ubuntu, right click on "Passwords: login" and choose "Change Password"



                  You will then need to enter your current keyring password and set your new keyring password to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To test: Log out, log back in and open Evolution to prove that this has worked.






                  share|improve this answer























                  • 2





                    I think this only works when you're not set to automatically log in.

                    – Matthew
                    Aug 13 '10 at 19:37






                  • 2





                    It didn't work for me. Deleting the default keyring neither. It really sucks.

                    – e-satis
                    Oct 15 '10 at 11:07






                  • 2





                    Just to note that on Ubuntu 14.04 you can get to the Passwords and Encryption Keys window mentioned above by running the command seahorse from the command line (or searching for seahorse and then clicking on "passwords and keys")

                    – eric
                    Nov 12 '15 at 11:27











                  • I tried multiple times and when I'm about to run back to windows, I decided to try putting different password on "login" and the "default" keyring. Then I just tip the "unlock the keyring every time you login"

                    – egotopia
                    Jan 24 '16 at 23:51













                  11














                  11










                  11









                  You need to get the password for your login key ring to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To do this follow the path:



                  Open Applications > Accessories > Passwords and Encryption Keys


                  You will see under the passwords tab a list of keyrings. One should be called



                  "Passwords: login"



                  Click on the + and you should see a list of accounts that require passwords such as you Gwibber details, Evolution passwords etc.



                  This means when you log in all of these accounts will be unlocked by this login keyring.



                  To get the keyring to unlock when you log into Ubuntu, right click on "Passwords: login" and choose "Change Password"



                  You will then need to enter your current keyring password and set your new keyring password to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To test: Log out, log back in and open Evolution to prove that this has worked.






                  share|improve this answer
















                  You need to get the password for your login key ring to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To do this follow the path:



                  Open Applications > Accessories > Passwords and Encryption Keys


                  You will see under the passwords tab a list of keyrings. One should be called



                  "Passwords: login"



                  Click on the + and you should see a list of accounts that require passwords such as you Gwibber details, Evolution passwords etc.



                  This means when you log in all of these accounts will be unlocked by this login keyring.



                  To get the keyring to unlock when you log into Ubuntu, right click on "Passwords: login" and choose "Change Password"



                  You will then need to enter your current keyring password and set your new keyring password to be the same as your normal login password.



                  To test: Log out, log back in and open Evolution to prove that this has worked.







                  share|improve this answer















                  share|improve this answer




                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jun 22 '16 at 22:29









                  andrew.46

                  24k15 gold badges82 silver badges164 bronze badges




                  24k15 gold badges82 silver badges164 bronze badges










                  answered Aug 4 '10 at 22:14









                  Richard HollowayRichard Holloway

                  22.3k6 gold badges44 silver badges55 bronze badges




                  22.3k6 gold badges44 silver badges55 bronze badges










                  • 2





                    I think this only works when you're not set to automatically log in.

                    – Matthew
                    Aug 13 '10 at 19:37






                  • 2





                    It didn't work for me. Deleting the default keyring neither. It really sucks.

                    – e-satis
                    Oct 15 '10 at 11:07






                  • 2





                    Just to note that on Ubuntu 14.04 you can get to the Passwords and Encryption Keys window mentioned above by running the command seahorse from the command line (or searching for seahorse and then clicking on "passwords and keys")

                    – eric
                    Nov 12 '15 at 11:27











                  • I tried multiple times and when I'm about to run back to windows, I decided to try putting different password on "login" and the "default" keyring. Then I just tip the "unlock the keyring every time you login"

                    – egotopia
                    Jan 24 '16 at 23:51












                  • 2





                    I think this only works when you're not set to automatically log in.

                    – Matthew
                    Aug 13 '10 at 19:37






                  • 2





                    It didn't work for me. Deleting the default keyring neither. It really sucks.

                    – e-satis
                    Oct 15 '10 at 11:07






                  • 2





                    Just to note that on Ubuntu 14.04 you can get to the Passwords and Encryption Keys window mentioned above by running the command seahorse from the command line (or searching for seahorse and then clicking on "passwords and keys")

                    – eric
                    Nov 12 '15 at 11:27











                  • I tried multiple times and when I'm about to run back to windows, I decided to try putting different password on "login" and the "default" keyring. Then I just tip the "unlock the keyring every time you login"

                    – egotopia
                    Jan 24 '16 at 23:51







                  2




                  2





                  I think this only works when you're not set to automatically log in.

                  – Matthew
                  Aug 13 '10 at 19:37





                  I think this only works when you're not set to automatically log in.

                  – Matthew
                  Aug 13 '10 at 19:37




                  2




                  2





                  It didn't work for me. Deleting the default keyring neither. It really sucks.

                  – e-satis
                  Oct 15 '10 at 11:07





                  It didn't work for me. Deleting the default keyring neither. It really sucks.

                  – e-satis
                  Oct 15 '10 at 11:07




                  2




                  2





                  Just to note that on Ubuntu 14.04 you can get to the Passwords and Encryption Keys window mentioned above by running the command seahorse from the command line (or searching for seahorse and then clicking on "passwords and keys")

                  – eric
                  Nov 12 '15 at 11:27





                  Just to note that on Ubuntu 14.04 you can get to the Passwords and Encryption Keys window mentioned above by running the command seahorse from the command line (or searching for seahorse and then clicking on "passwords and keys")

                  – eric
                  Nov 12 '15 at 11:27













                  I tried multiple times and when I'm about to run back to windows, I decided to try putting different password on "login" and the "default" keyring. Then I just tip the "unlock the keyring every time you login"

                  – egotopia
                  Jan 24 '16 at 23:51





                  I tried multiple times and when I'm about to run back to windows, I decided to try putting different password on "login" and the "default" keyring. Then I just tip the "unlock the keyring every time you login"

                  – egotopia
                  Jan 24 '16 at 23:51











                  9


















                  Use this if you have forgotten the old password and is ok to delete items in the old keyring, but want to safeguard new keyring with matching password.



                  For Ubuntu 14.04, I used the following.



                  Remove old keyring:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  rm *.keyring


                  Restart the system to have the new keyring created:



                  sudo shutdown -r now


                  Verify the new keyring exists:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  ls -ltr *.keyring





                  share|improve this answer




























                  • It works for me.

                    – yAnTar
                    Aug 31 '17 at 12:32















                  9


















                  Use this if you have forgotten the old password and is ok to delete items in the old keyring, but want to safeguard new keyring with matching password.



                  For Ubuntu 14.04, I used the following.



                  Remove old keyring:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  rm *.keyring


                  Restart the system to have the new keyring created:



                  sudo shutdown -r now


                  Verify the new keyring exists:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  ls -ltr *.keyring





                  share|improve this answer




























                  • It works for me.

                    – yAnTar
                    Aug 31 '17 at 12:32













                  9














                  9










                  9









                  Use this if you have forgotten the old password and is ok to delete items in the old keyring, but want to safeguard new keyring with matching password.



                  For Ubuntu 14.04, I used the following.



                  Remove old keyring:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  rm *.keyring


                  Restart the system to have the new keyring created:



                  sudo shutdown -r now


                  Verify the new keyring exists:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  ls -ltr *.keyring





                  share|improve this answer
















                  Use this if you have forgotten the old password and is ok to delete items in the old keyring, but want to safeguard new keyring with matching password.



                  For Ubuntu 14.04, I used the following.



                  Remove old keyring:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  rm *.keyring


                  Restart the system to have the new keyring created:



                  sudo shutdown -r now


                  Verify the new keyring exists:



                  cd .local/share/keyrings/
                  ls -ltr *.keyring






                  share|improve this answer















                  share|improve this answer




                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Nov 22 '15 at 2:49









                  muru

                  1




                  1










                  answered Nov 22 '15 at 2:05









                  KingslyKingsly

                  2612 silver badges4 bronze badges




                  2612 silver badges4 bronze badges















                  • It works for me.

                    – yAnTar
                    Aug 31 '17 at 12:32

















                  • It works for me.

                    – yAnTar
                    Aug 31 '17 at 12:32
















                  It works for me.

                  – yAnTar
                  Aug 31 '17 at 12:32





                  It works for me.

                  – yAnTar
                  Aug 31 '17 at 12:32











                  8


















                  Using Ubuntu 11.10 with Unity:



                  1. Open "Passwords and Keys" application

                  2. In the Passwords tab, right click on the password icon

                  3. Select "Change Password"

                  4. Enter your current password as the "Old Password"

                  5. Leave the "New Password" and "Confirm" fields empty

                  6. Click "Ok"

                  7. Confirm to "Use Unsafe Storage"

                  Hope that works for you






                  share|improve this answer




























                  • Yes, I can confirm this working.

                    – c0de
                    Nov 17 '11 at 19:18















                  8


















                  Using Ubuntu 11.10 with Unity:



                  1. Open "Passwords and Keys" application

                  2. In the Passwords tab, right click on the password icon

                  3. Select "Change Password"

                  4. Enter your current password as the "Old Password"

                  5. Leave the "New Password" and "Confirm" fields empty

                  6. Click "Ok"

                  7. Confirm to "Use Unsafe Storage"

                  Hope that works for you






                  share|improve this answer




























                  • Yes, I can confirm this working.

                    – c0de
                    Nov 17 '11 at 19:18













                  8














                  8










                  8









                  Using Ubuntu 11.10 with Unity:



                  1. Open "Passwords and Keys" application

                  2. In the Passwords tab, right click on the password icon

                  3. Select "Change Password"

                  4. Enter your current password as the "Old Password"

                  5. Leave the "New Password" and "Confirm" fields empty

                  6. Click "Ok"

                  7. Confirm to "Use Unsafe Storage"

                  Hope that works for you






                  share|improve this answer
















                  Using Ubuntu 11.10 with Unity:



                  1. Open "Passwords and Keys" application

                  2. In the Passwords tab, right click on the password icon

                  3. Select "Change Password"

                  4. Enter your current password as the "Old Password"

                  5. Leave the "New Password" and "Confirm" fields empty

                  6. Click "Ok"

                  7. Confirm to "Use Unsafe Storage"

                  Hope that works for you







                  share|improve this answer















                  share|improve this answer




                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jan 29 '12 at 12:03









                  Yi Jiang

                  9371 gold badge12 silver badges27 bronze badges




                  9371 gold badge12 silver badges27 bronze badges










                  answered Nov 17 '11 at 19:06









                  JohnMiltonJohnMilton

                  1231 silver badge1 bronze badge




                  1231 silver badge1 bronze badge















                  • Yes, I can confirm this working.

                    – c0de
                    Nov 17 '11 at 19:18

















                  • Yes, I can confirm this working.

                    – c0de
                    Nov 17 '11 at 19:18
















                  Yes, I can confirm this working.

                  – c0de
                  Nov 17 '11 at 19:18





                  Yes, I can confirm this working.

                  – c0de
                  Nov 17 '11 at 19:18











                  1


















                  For Ubuntu 13.10:



                  1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys


                  2. Click View -> "By keyring"


                  3. Right-click on the "login" keyring


                  4. Select "Change password"


                  5. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

                  6. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".





                  share|improve this answer






























                    1


















                    For Ubuntu 13.10:



                    1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys


                    2. Click View -> "By keyring"


                    3. Right-click on the "login" keyring


                    4. Select "Change password"


                    5. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

                    6. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".





                    share|improve this answer




























                      1














                      1










                      1









                      For Ubuntu 13.10:



                      1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys


                      2. Click View -> "By keyring"


                      3. Right-click on the "login" keyring


                      4. Select "Change password"


                      5. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

                      6. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".





                      share|improve this answer














                      For Ubuntu 13.10:



                      1. Open Applications -> Accessories -> Password and Encryption Keys


                      2. Click View -> "By keyring"


                      3. Right-click on the "login" keyring


                      4. Select "Change password"


                      5. Enter your old password and leave the new password blank

                      6. Press ok, read the security warning, think about it and if you still want to get rid of this dialog, choose "use unsafe storage".






                      share|improve this answer













                      share|improve this answer




                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Nov 7 '13 at 16:02









                      Eric LeschinskiEric Leschinski

                      1,6021 gold badge14 silver badges21 bronze badges




                      1,6021 gold badge14 silver badges21 bronze badges
























                          1


















                          This is what works



                          Create a desktop entry in Notepad/Mousepad



                          [Desktop Entry]
                          Version=1.0
                          Type=Application
                          Name=Google Chrome
                          Comment=
                          Exec=google-chrome --password-store=basic
                          Icon=google-chrome
                          Path=
                          Terminal=false
                          StartupNotify=false


                          Call it Google Chrome.desktop



                          Now just a matter of running our newly created Shortcut which launches
                          Chrome without any interruptions!






                          share|improve this answer






























                            1


















                            This is what works



                            Create a desktop entry in Notepad/Mousepad



                            [Desktop Entry]
                            Version=1.0
                            Type=Application
                            Name=Google Chrome
                            Comment=
                            Exec=google-chrome --password-store=basic
                            Icon=google-chrome
                            Path=
                            Terminal=false
                            StartupNotify=false


                            Call it Google Chrome.desktop



                            Now just a matter of running our newly created Shortcut which launches
                            Chrome without any interruptions!






                            share|improve this answer




























                              1














                              1










                              1









                              This is what works



                              Create a desktop entry in Notepad/Mousepad



                              [Desktop Entry]
                              Version=1.0
                              Type=Application
                              Name=Google Chrome
                              Comment=
                              Exec=google-chrome --password-store=basic
                              Icon=google-chrome
                              Path=
                              Terminal=false
                              StartupNotify=false


                              Call it Google Chrome.desktop



                              Now just a matter of running our newly created Shortcut which launches
                              Chrome without any interruptions!






                              share|improve this answer














                              This is what works



                              Create a desktop entry in Notepad/Mousepad



                              [Desktop Entry]
                              Version=1.0
                              Type=Application
                              Name=Google Chrome
                              Comment=
                              Exec=google-chrome --password-store=basic
                              Icon=google-chrome
                              Path=
                              Terminal=false
                              StartupNotify=false


                              Call it Google Chrome.desktop



                              Now just a matter of running our newly created Shortcut which launches
                              Chrome without any interruptions!







                              share|improve this answer













                              share|improve this answer




                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Apr 4 at 9:06









                              Puneet BapnaPuneet Bapna

                              445 bronze badges




                              445 bronze badges
























                                  0


















                                  I have solved this problem through terminal.There is a directory under /usr/lib , called gnome-keyring. Under that directory there are a directory 'devel' and two files gnome-keyring-prompt and gnome-keyring-prompt-3.I don't know much about the directory 'devel'.So I removed only the two files and solved the problem.The corresponding commands are here-



                                  cd /usr/lib/gnome-keyring


                                  Then



                                  sudo rm gnome-keyring-prompt gnome-keyring-prompt-3


                                  And then reboot your computer to see the effect.






                                  share|improve this answer






























                                    0


















                                    I have solved this problem through terminal.There is a directory under /usr/lib , called gnome-keyring. Under that directory there are a directory 'devel' and two files gnome-keyring-prompt and gnome-keyring-prompt-3.I don't know much about the directory 'devel'.So I removed only the two files and solved the problem.The corresponding commands are here-



                                    cd /usr/lib/gnome-keyring


                                    Then



                                    sudo rm gnome-keyring-prompt gnome-keyring-prompt-3


                                    And then reboot your computer to see the effect.






                                    share|improve this answer




























                                      0














                                      0










                                      0









                                      I have solved this problem through terminal.There is a directory under /usr/lib , called gnome-keyring. Under that directory there are a directory 'devel' and two files gnome-keyring-prompt and gnome-keyring-prompt-3.I don't know much about the directory 'devel'.So I removed only the two files and solved the problem.The corresponding commands are here-



                                      cd /usr/lib/gnome-keyring


                                      Then



                                      sudo rm gnome-keyring-prompt gnome-keyring-prompt-3


                                      And then reboot your computer to see the effect.






                                      share|improve this answer














                                      I have solved this problem through terminal.There is a directory under /usr/lib , called gnome-keyring. Under that directory there are a directory 'devel' and two files gnome-keyring-prompt and gnome-keyring-prompt-3.I don't know much about the directory 'devel'.So I removed only the two files and solved the problem.The corresponding commands are here-



                                      cd /usr/lib/gnome-keyring


                                      Then



                                      sudo rm gnome-keyring-prompt gnome-keyring-prompt-3


                                      And then reboot your computer to see the effect.







                                      share|improve this answer













                                      share|improve this answer




                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered Jun 12 '14 at 16:06









                                      saptarshi nagsaptarshi nag

                                      3751 gold badge2 silver badges12 bronze badges




                                      3751 gold badge2 silver badges12 bronze badges
























                                          -2


















                                          open passwords and keys then



                                          enter image description here



                                          enter image description here



                                          Then you need to enter your current password (old password). Don't enter any password for your new one, or leave it blank.



                                          You need to confirm that you will store unencrypted password. If you are sure that it is what you want, then just click "Use Unsafe Storage" button.






                                          share|improve this answer


























                                          • yeah sure i am talking about 12.04

                                            – user61928
                                            Sep 15 '12 at 9:43















                                          -2


















                                          open passwords and keys then



                                          enter image description here



                                          enter image description here



                                          Then you need to enter your current password (old password). Don't enter any password for your new one, or leave it blank.



                                          You need to confirm that you will store unencrypted password. If you are sure that it is what you want, then just click "Use Unsafe Storage" button.






                                          share|improve this answer


























                                          • yeah sure i am talking about 12.04

                                            – user61928
                                            Sep 15 '12 at 9:43













                                          -2














                                          -2










                                          -2









                                          open passwords and keys then



                                          enter image description here



                                          enter image description here



                                          Then you need to enter your current password (old password). Don't enter any password for your new one, or leave it blank.



                                          You need to confirm that you will store unencrypted password. If you are sure that it is what you want, then just click "Use Unsafe Storage" button.






                                          share|improve this answer














                                          open passwords and keys then



                                          enter image description here



                                          enter image description here



                                          Then you need to enter your current password (old password). Don't enter any password for your new one, or leave it blank.



                                          You need to confirm that you will store unencrypted password. If you are sure that it is what you want, then just click "Use Unsafe Storage" button.







                                          share|improve this answer













                                          share|improve this answer




                                          share|improve this answer










                                          answered Sep 14 '12 at 14:20







                                          user61928






















                                          • yeah sure i am talking about 12.04

                                            – user61928
                                            Sep 15 '12 at 9:43

















                                          • yeah sure i am talking about 12.04

                                            – user61928
                                            Sep 15 '12 at 9:43
















                                          yeah sure i am talking about 12.04

                                          – user61928
                                          Sep 15 '12 at 9:43





                                          yeah sure i am talking about 12.04

                                          – user61928
                                          Sep 15 '12 at 9:43





                                          protected by Community Jan 24 '12 at 15:47



                                          Thank you for your interest in this question.
                                          Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                                          Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



                                          Popular posts from this blog

                                          Tamil (spriik) Luke uk diar | Nawigatjuun

                                          Align equal signs while including text over equalitiesAMS align: left aligned text/math plus multicolumn alignmentMultiple alignmentsAligning equations in multiple placesNumbering and aligning an equation with multiple columnsHow to align one equation with another multline equationUsing \ in environments inside the begintabularxNumber equations and preserving alignment of equal signsHow can I align equations to the left and to the right?Double equation alignment problem within align enviromentAligned within align: Why are they right-aligned?

                                          Training a classifier when some of the features are unknownWhy does Gradient Boosting regression predict negative values when there are no negative y-values in my training set?How to improve an existing (trained) classifier?What is effect when I set up some self defined predisctor variables?Why Matlab neural network classification returns decimal values on prediction dataset?Fitting and transforming text data in training, testing, and validation setsHow to quantify the performance of the classifier (multi-class SVM) using the test data?How do I control for some patients providing multiple samples in my training data?Training and Test setTraining a convolutional neural network for image denoising in MatlabShouldn't an autoencoder with #(neurons in hidden layer) = #(neurons in input layer) be “perfect”?