Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Password Pusher is a lightweight tool for securely sending passwords or other secret text. Users create a secret link containing sensitive content, and the recipient opens the link to read it. Links can expire based on either a number of days or a number of views, and are deleted as soon as either limit is reached. The captured text shows a default example of 7 days and 5 views, and advises users not to include extra identifying information in the password field, reducing the risk of correlation if the link is leaked.
Its main protection model is not endpoint security or network perimeter defense, but safer secret distribution. All passwords are encrypted before being stored, and once they expire, the encrypted password is removed from the database. When creating a push, users can configure parameters such as expire_after_days, expire_after_views, passphrase, retrieval_step, and deletable_by_viewer. The retrieval step helps prevent chat apps or URL scanners from consuming views prematurely, while allowing the recipient to delete the push is useful for “retrieve once, then destroy” workflows. Fetching an active push counts as a view and is recorded in the audit log, but the text does not show full alerting, reporting, or SIEM integration capabilities.
Based on the source text, it is available as a web service and a JSON API. The API supports both anonymous and authenticated access, with authentication via Bearer Token. It also notes that the older X-User-Email/X-User-Token headers are deprecated but may still be compatible. The API can create and retrieve pushes, with payloads including text/passwords, URLs, and QR codes. File attachments require authentication and a subscription. On pricing, the only confirmed detail is that some features require a subscription; plan prices, payment methods, and enterprise terms are not disclosed.
Its strengths are simplicity, directness, and a low learning curve. It is well suited to temporarily sharing passwords, tokens, or one-time sensitive information in operations, development, customer support, or outsourced collaboration scenarios. The API also makes it easy to embed into scripts and ticketing workflows. Its limitations are that it is not a full password manager, key management system, or privileged access management platform. There is no visible explanation of role-based permissions, compliance certifications, SLA, enterprise audit features, or centralized policy management.
The source text does not provide information on mainland China network accessibility, payment options, or localization, so china_access can only be marked as unknown. If access is unstable, or if compliance and data residency requirements apply, consider evaluating Bitwarden Send, 1Password, Vaultwarden, HashiCorp Vault, or a China-compliant enterprise password/key management solution.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on gcs-rsi1.fr official site.
gcs-rsi1.fr is an France Security provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach gcs-rsi1.fr directly.