Password Managers
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Unfortunately LastPass had some issues over the past years with hacking where encrypted vaults were stolen. Between myself and my friends in tech, I know of a few conpanie that ditched it after that.
For individual/personal use, I'd reccomend KeePass (whatever fork of it is up to date and maintained lately) and using somethung like syncthing to sync it across devices. That may not be super user friendly for non-technical users though, and I'm not sure how well it works with iPhones.
For iOS devices the most up to date client is "Strongbox". I don't think it is FOSS, but is compliant with the standard. It's sadly a freemium app, but is quite well made in my testing. It cannot sync with syncthing, but does support several cloud services, its own service (which uses iCloud), and local file transfer over LAN. They also have a version of the app with all network connectivity removed for security (if you prefer)
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I'm a massive fan, and long time user, of bitwarden.
It's so much better since they updated the (IMO) ugly, dated UI design. It looks nice and fresh now. Bitwarden is the MVP.
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
No one has mentioned pwsafe, which was originally created by Bruce Schneier and is still maintained.
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
KeePass + Tresorit
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There's a workaround, at least for Firefox
Where would one find that?
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
What's up with protonpass? Any pointers?
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Where would one find that?
https://github.com/keepassxreboot/keepassxc-browser/issues/1631#issuecomment-2464608760
I think that was the method that worked for me
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
KeepassXC + webdav
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Bitwarden.
You know if you need more than that and if you’re asking on lemmy you don’t need more than that.
Vaultwarden. It's FOSS Bitwarden. Host it on your own server/machine
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+1 for keepassxc + syncthing
Also generally recommebd syncthing instead of cloud storage for you phone pics and music and stuff
Samesies!
One very important word of caution (unfortunately coming from experience): Syncthing, as the name suggests, makes it so the content of one device is the same as that of another device. So, even if you have one device set to only receive data, it means that if you delete a file from the sending device, the receiving device will also delete that file to stay in sync with the sending device. There is a way to use Syncthing as a simple backup storage program (not necessarily the best solution but much better than manually backing up your files every few months and just hoping for the best). But it means that you have to use the advanced folder option "ignoreDelete". I also use the file versioning system, so even if something is automatically deleted by mistake, it's still versioned in a special subfolder and accessible to me.
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Vaultwarden. It's FOSS Bitwarden. Host it on your own server/machine
I would recommend people not do that unless they know they need to and again, if you know you need to you’re not asking on lemmy.
Hosting your own secrets not only puts the burden of protecting, providing access to and preserving the secrets entirely on you, but puts a very unique set of hosting goals squarely on you as well.
Even a skilled administrator with significant resources at hand would often be better served by simply using bitwarden instead of hosting vaultwarden.
An example I used in another thread about password managers was a disaster. When your local server is inoperable or destroyed and general local network failure makes your cloud accessible backup unreachable, can you access your secrets safely from a public computer at the fire department, church or refugee center?
Bitwarden works well from public computers and there’s a whole guide for doing it as safely as possible on their website.
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Samesies!
One very important word of caution (unfortunately coming from experience): Syncthing, as the name suggests, makes it so the content of one device is the same as that of another device. So, even if you have one device set to only receive data, it means that if you delete a file from the sending device, the receiving device will also delete that file to stay in sync with the sending device. There is a way to use Syncthing as a simple backup storage program (not necessarily the best solution but much better than manually backing up your files every few months and just hoping for the best). But it means that you have to use the advanced folder option "ignoreDelete". I also use the file versioning system, so even if something is automatically deleted by mistake, it's still versioned in a special subfolder and accessible to me.
Yeah i basically view it like a network drive in its default configuration. As if you were carrying around a USB drive.
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What's up with protonpass? Any pointers?
Password manager from proton(protonmail/protonvpn guys)
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Probably not ideal but I use Google drive for synching and it worked fine. The database is encrypted so, at worst, Google knows I have a password manager.
the last time I did this it was Dropbox and I ended up with a thousand conflict copies of the database
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
Bitwarden.
If you want to keep it in a file you want to sync yourself: keepass -
Bitwarden.
If you want to keep it in a file you want to sync yourself: keepassKeepass + Syncthing is an undefeated combo
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
KeepassXC + syncthing
Fully under your control
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
Definitely Bitwarden
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
Also voting for bitwarden
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What is a really smart choice for password manager apps? Concerned about privacy and politically involved CEOs.
I've used:
- LastPass
- 1Password
- ProtonPass (Now using)
I thought ProtonPass was a good choice but I'm starting to read more about it. What's just a really solid choice all around, that you can feel good about? Free or paid.
Been a Bitwarden user for several years now, both personal and deployed at multiple small businesses.
It has been fantastic the whole time. Pricing is great, open source, runs on basically everything, and easy to use.
KeypassXC if you're uber-paranoid or a hardcore Stallmanite, otherwise, Bitwarden all day 100%