Based on our record, One-Time Secret seems to be a lot more popular than DBpedia. While we know about 33 links to One-Time Secret, we've tracked only 1 mention of DBpedia. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
An Entity of Type: Abstraction100002137, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org. Source: about 2 years ago
Https://onetimesecret.com for people that you don’t generally talk/work with. We use lastpass for internal stuff. Source: 10 months ago
My vote for onetimesecret.com we use a self hosted instance, allows for a single view before burning. Source: 10 months ago
They then take like 1 week to get to you and asks for your phone number to send the password, but they never send it to your phone number but instead sends you the link to your password (which was a https://onetimesecret.com/ link) and a .7z file with ur data. Source: 10 months ago
Oh man I was using onetimesecret but I like this better. Source: 10 months ago
A 1 time use link, it looks a bit more secure than onetimesecret.com. Source: over 1 year ago
YAGO - YAGO2s is a huge semantic knowledge base, derived from Wikipedia WordNet and GeoNames.
Password Pusher - Go Ahead. Email Another Password.
OpenCyc - OpenCyc is a cut-down open version of the Cyc technology, the world's largest and most complete...
Password.link - Securely send and receive secrets using a one-time link. The secret is encrypted and decrypted in the browser using an encryption key only known by the user. Has features like notifications, teams, API. Trusted by IT teams all around the world.
Wikidata - Linking items with help from Wikipedia and user contributions.
1ty.me - If you need to send a password or some other form of simple but sensitive information to someone...