Excellent! Lots of great features. I am very appreciative of your and svk's work. Thanks
One thing though
As long as you choose a sufficiently long and complex password (use a password manager!), your keys are safe.
...and so long as you also have a 100% clean OS; in an isolated environment, trust the OS image, trust your internet connection isn't routed via an attacker, and don't fuck up by accidentally logging in via a potentially compromised computer.
WOOPS! Time to start over again and secure a new account...
Keyloggers now have the potential to ruin your financial life. New customers are going to be scared away until this is resolved with hardware wallet (trezor) support
Only then you're safe
I would welcome being proven wrong
You should use Zemana AntiLogger. Don't type anything sensitive on a computer that doesn't have AntiLogger installed. And use a password manager so you can have a different extremely long password for every log in.
So: use antilogger to type in extremely long password, then change the bts password whilst logged in? So there's a new password every time?
Zemena antilogger reviews don't look too good. Allegedly it encrypts the text you type, then decrypts it so that the website can receive it.
Apparently decent/advanced keyloggers can defeat it. What do you think?
I haven't seen any bad reviews of Zemana as an anti-keylogger, and it's been around for years. But they also do anti-malware now, and I'm not too sure how good that functionality is. Maybe that's where the review comes from. Either way, I doubt Zemana or any anti-keylogger is 100%, and certainly wouldn't rely on it alone, but it's an extra layer of protection in conjunction with anti-virus and anti-malware software, and it's pretty lightweight.. As for using Antilogger, it just runs in the background, and it should start up automatically when your computer starts.
But I was saying previously it's a password manager that enables you to realistically use very long passwords (40+ upper case, lower case, numbers, and special characters), otherwise you couldn't possibly remember them. The password manager also enables you to use a different very strong password for everything you log into, which is another good precaution that is really only feasible with a password manager. Just make sure to use a long master passphrase to secure the password manager itself.
Speaking of which, I have a fingerprint scanner, so that's a good option for logging into your password manager without having to type your passphrase once let alone multiple times throughout the day (i.e. when it times out, which you can also adjust). The fingerprint scanner is obviously really convenient, and it's also safer since the previously discussed keylogger protection is unlikely 100%. But if you don't have a fingerprint scanner and want to be extra safe logging into your password manager, you can use the password manager's virtual keyboard login screen. Hope this helps.