Support

Got a question or hit a snag? We're happy to help. Email us at [email protected] — we're a small indie shop and usually reply within a day or two.

Set up the selection shortcut

macOS doesn't automatically assign the ⌃⌥⌘K shortcut that saves a highlighted selection. You assign it once, and it's yours from then on. keybridge's first-run Setup Guide walks you through this, and the menu-bar item "Set Up Selection Shortcut…" deep-links you straight to the right settings pane.

  1. Open Keyboard Shortcuts

    Go to System Settings → Keyboard → Keyboard Shortcuts, then select Services in the sidebar.

  2. Find the keybridge service

    Scroll to the Text section and locate "Save Secret to Keychain". Make sure its checkbox is enabled.

  3. Assign the shortcut

    Click to the right of the service, then press ⌃⌥⌘K (or any combination you prefer) to set it.

  4. Try it anywhere

    Highlight some text in any app, then either right-click → Services → "Save Secret to Keychain" or press your new shortcut. A glass panel opens so you can name and save the secret.

The "Save Secret to Keychain" item only appears while keybridge is running. On a fresh install, macOS may need a moment — or a relaunch or log-out — before the service registers and shows up in the Services menu.

Prefer not to fiddle with shortcuts? Clipboard capture works immediately with no setup: copy a secret, then press ⌃⌥⌘V to open the save panel.

Frequently asked questions

Where are my saved secrets stored?

In your Apple Keychain, scoped privately to keybridge using the data-protection keychain. Because of that scoping they don't appear in Keychain Access.app or the security CLI — that's expected and is a privacy feature. View them in keybridge's own command palette with ⌘⇧K.

The "Save Secret to Keychain" menu item isn't showing up.

keybridge must be running for the service to appear, since it's a background menu-bar app. On a fresh install, relaunch the app or log out and back in so macOS registers it. Also confirm the service is enabled under System Settings → Keyboard → Keyboard Shortcuts → Services.

How do I retrieve a secret I saved?

Press ⌘⇧K to open the Spotlight-style command palette. Search by service or account name, then copy the secret with a single keystroke.

Do my secrets ever leave my Mac?

No. keybridge has no servers, no analytics, and makes no network connections — it collects nothing. The only exception is optional iCloud Keychain sync, which is handled entirely by Apple if you turn it on.

Can I sync across my Macs?

Yes. Flip the iCloud Keychain toggle when saving a secret, and Apple syncs it across the Macs signed into your iCloud account.

Why do I have to type the service name myself?

The macOS sandbox forbids reading the active app's URL or window contents, so keybridge can't auto-detect where a key came from. Typing the name yourself is a deliberate privacy choice — and required for Mac App Store approval.

What are the system requirements?

macOS 14 or later, on Apple silicon or Intel.

I uninstalled keybridge — are my secrets gone?

No. Secrets already written to your Apple Keychain remain there after you remove the app. View them again by reinstalling keybridge and opening the palette with ⌘⇧K.

Still need help?

Reach out any time at [email protected] and we'll get back to you.