Accessing an accounts
What happens when you have web sites i.e." Ebay, Amazon that you have to sign in to access the site.:www.amazon.com, them you have to sign in again to access your personal account
1Password Version: 6
Extension Version: 6.6.4
OS Version: Mac OS Sierra
Sync Type: Not Provided
Referrer: forum-search:What happens when a site requires two passwords (1 to access the site and 1 to access my account)
Comments
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@gatorbobpac: Do you mean just logging in more than once? There isn't a way to automate this, and that's very much by design. We don't want 1Password taking any action unless the user tells it to. So any time you're at a login page, you can simply press
⌘ \
to tell 1Password to fill there (it can also log you in if you have Autosubmit enabled). I hope this helps. Be sure to let me know if you have any other questions! :)0 -
Do you mean that I need 2 Amazon accounts on 1 Password, the initial one to just get the website and then the second one to get the actual account
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@gatorbobpac: Nope! But that's a fantastic question. I'll tell you how I have things setup as an example, and maybe that will help you get some ideas for yourself.
In my own Amazon login in 1Password, I've saved the following as the URL:
Don't ask me what all of that is, but that's the URL of the login page for Amazon's seller site. The way I have it setup like this is so that selecting the login in 1Password will take me right to the login page and fill my credentials. There are many different login URLs for Amazon, so if there's a particular part of the site you want to be able to get to quickly, you can use that URL — sort of like a bookmark.
Now, obviously there are a lot of times where clicking on a link within Amazon's site will prompt you to login. No problem! Since the URL I'm using contains "amazon.com" at its core, 1Password will offer that login to me on any page within Amazon.com, so that I can easily fill my login, either by clicking the 1Password button in the browser, or pressing the
⌘ \
keyboard shortcut as I described earlier. So a single login will work for me no matter what I'm doing on Amazon's site.Another thing to keep in mind is that since you can add multiple URLs to a login in 1Password, you can actually use one for multiple websites. 1Password will offer you any logins matching the URL you're visiting. So, for instance, since Amazon owns Audible, I could also use my Amazon login there as well by adding an "audible.com" URL to the login. This isn't actually necessary in practice, as Audible actually takes me to an Amazon.com URL to login, but hopefully that gives you an idea of how this can work. Let me know if that helps! :)
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