Adobe Sign-In Improvement
Adobe Acrobat will prompt users to sign-in to Adobe.com when we need to sign documents. As a best practice, complex passwords are encouraged in all our accounts. Adobe.com enforces this by asking for passwords which must have:
1) Contains at least 8 characters
2) Contains both lower (a-z) and upper case letters (A-Z)
3) Contains at least one number (0-9) or a symbol
4) Does not contain your name or email address
5) Is not commonly used or a previous password
As a result, many of us, as an enterprise or as individuals have adopted password managers such as browser password managers found in Google, Apple, Microsoft, browsers or 3rd party ones such as 1Password, KeePass, etc to manage our complex passwords for us.
Yet, the Adobe Sign-In window that opens when we are prompted to enter our password does not support any of the password managers or its extensions. To make matters worst, it does not support copy & paste directly into the one time passcode or password fields.
This means users are forced to have their complex passwords open and visible, displaying this on our screens while we manually look back and forth typing in a complex password that is meant to be hidden away from prying eyes in the office environment. Corporate helpdesk supporting Adobe products remotely connected to our workstations also have visibility in this manner.
This is a serious password exposure risk to our Adobe.com accounts.
Suggestion: Enhance Adobe Sign-In within Adobe apps to support password managers or its extensions. Or as an alternate workaround, allow copy & paste of one time passcodes (2FA) and passwords into the Adobe Sign-In Window.