My favorite password manager is KeypassDx. I also use proton pass. What do you use and why?

  • @[email protected]
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    23 hours ago

    I notice there aren’t a lot of Dashlane fans. (I use Bitwarden myself.)

    Is there something wrong with them?

  • @[email protected]
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    34 hours ago

    KeePassXC + Keepass2Andriod, keep it all synced using Syncthing. Desktop/Laptop/Phone all have the passwords synchronized, it is super convenient.

    I have been doing it this way for years, never had any issues; just starting to investigate using passkeys where I can. So that is a new adventure; I’ll see how it goes with my current workflow.

  • Mitex Leo
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    4411 hours ago

    Bitwarden is simple, reliable and works on all of my devices.

  • @Case
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    26 hours ago

    I use proton pass currently.

    My life is changing in less than two weeks.

    I have an enterprise grade server that I can’t run for a variety of home reasons.

    When me and the wife… for lack of a better term, escape, our situation, I’ll be able to self host. I know its gonna be a struggle, I have things to learn, and that is why I’m so excited.

  • @[email protected]
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    5112 hours ago

    Bitwarden. It is open source, reliable, easy to use, and compatible with everything. The free version has nearly everything, but I have the paid version to support development because $10 per year is very reasonable.

    I do regularly export my password vault to KeePassXC as my backup though.

  • @[email protected]
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    15 hours ago

    Hands down, Bitwarden app on phone and in browser. Vaultwarden self hosted. Since I host it at home, I know it’s always in my server. The winning thing for me is that Bitwarden Supports Webuathn now, you can use it as it’s own webuathn key you authorize to log in with, so basically go the site you want to login with and when it asks for the webuathn, you can either have Bitwarden use the credentials you stored for it or your own biometric or hardware key instead.

    With this, I sign into Authentik for my SSO just by clicking one link, and Bitwarden prompts to log in and I click the option. I’m auto logged into my server and no UN/PW passed to it.

    I’ve tested others and nothing quite comes close except for KeepassXC, but for me, it’s a matter of personal preference on my side. I’ve been with Bitwarden since the early days.

  • @leftzero
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    15 hours ago

    My brain. A password manager seems like a completely unnecessary single point of failure.

      • @leftzero
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        13 hours ago

        This assumes a) passwords, and b) poor passwords at that.

        Passphrases are easy to remember, extremely hard to crack, and easily customisable for every site, and you don’t need no fucking password manager to store them.

        Though I’ll give you this: password managers are not, after all, necessarily single points of failure.

        If you need a password manager to manage your passwords you’re a much more vulnerable point of failure than your password management bloatware itself.

        correct horse battery staple

        • Communist
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          21 hour ago

          Or you could not have to remember all of that, have vastly more complex passwords, have it be significantly more convenient.

          I currently have 100+ passwords stored in my password manager, do you actually expect people to remember 100+ unique phrases?

  • asudox
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    3 hours ago

    Bitwarden. The UI is about to be updated to something more modern so that’s no longer is an issue for most people. It’s also open source, so yes.

    The 10€ per year as the premium subscription is just unbeatable. You pay less than a euro per month for a reliable and robust password manager. And you don’t even need the premium subscription, because almost everything is free. I honestly consider it a donation rather than a subscription.

  • Victoria
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    1912 hours ago

    Bitwarden, i can self host it and it is quite convenient to have official apps for all platforms i use.

  • dinckel
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    710 hours ago

    I really enjoy 1Password. Works really well, plenty of storage functionality for all kinds of data. There’s watchtower functionality for poor or leaked passwords, or missing 2fa/passkeys too. One of my favorites is the built-in ssh-agent. In my eyes, it’s absolutely worth the asking price

  • calm.like.a.bomb
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    59 hours ago

    Bitwarden since they starded. Didn’t need anything more than the free subscription, but I’m thinking of self-hosting my own vaultwarden instance.