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Which Password manager you use? - Page 3
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Which Password manager you use?

13

Comments

  • OneLastBitKeeWarden.

  • Pen and paper will be fine.

  • @Hukin said:
    Pen and paper will be fine.

    Yeah.
    Post-it note on the monitor.

    Thanked by 1Yura
  • 1password.

  • I've been using LastPass for years, and it's such a relief to know about self-hosted Bitwarden. Need to take a closer look.

  • I'm confused. How hard is it to remember the one password that you use for everything?

    Thanked by 2eol Daniel15
  • eol said: Post-it note on the monitor.

    Only your mom can hack your Gmail or porn subscription. )

    Thanked by 1eol
  • Old school for unix users https://www.passwordstore.org/

  • bitwarden

    open source, works in chrome, android app

    it's the best. i used to use lastpass

  • I got a Dashlane Premium 1 year Subscription from Stacksocial, and I like it

  • Bitwarden. Free, open source, and can be self-hosted if you so desire.

  • none. brain

    Thanked by 1eol
  • Always used robform portable for USB and it is/was brilliant until it was discontinued a while back. Still works flawlessly and means that important passwords are not stored anywhere regardless of how much they say its secure to store on our 'external' server... errm no thanks.

    Had to move on whilst still using roboform and +1 for LastPass which we use daily, however, we also used its xmarks plugin for years which was a lifesaver and the way they discontinued the product and the many bugs doesn't leave any confidence in the companies other product offerings. Thankful that we don't rely on just one solution. Roboform works well and offers so much more :smiley:

  • notepad + icloud/onedrive

  • plain text ftw!

  • LastPass

  • @1allen said:
    currently Dashlane (got it with 40% discount somehow) –– looks good, but a bit overpriced imho, considering switching to Bitwarden. it's on-premise setup looks a bit tricky, so I don't mind purchasing hosted version ^^ nice value for the price.

    There is a project that mimics the upstream Bitwarden called Bitwarden_rs (https://github.com/dani-garcia/Bitwarden_rs) but makes it easier for a self host in a sine homed environment (always suggest taking frequent backups).

    I was previously using Dashlane but at $60/year, it was too pricey for me to continue past my discounted one year. Solid platform just costly to me.

    Thanked by 11allen
  • using stickypassword, able to save at local and run portable

  • LastPass

  • LostPass.

    Thanked by 1muffin
  • ive been using lastpass for about a year now love it have no complaints on it. have yet to play with it much to figure out full features but the basic password saving is just good enough

  • Keepass in Dropbox + chromeIPass for filling passwords in browser (with autofill disabled). Works on desktop and phone, beats glitching 3d party services like LastPass any day.

  • Bitwarden. Works and syncs great on all my daily devices (OS X, Windows & iOS)

  • bitwarden paid

  • I've used lastpass for years, but after they doubled the pricing to $24/yr I dropped to the free tier. I need to sit down and decide if there's a better alternative, but that's effort.

  • Currently I’m using 1Password, which works great on my all devices. But still figuring out some unused functions now.

  • @daxterfellowes said:

    @1allen said:
    currently Dashlane (got it with 40% discount somehow) –– looks good, but a bit overpriced imho, considering switching to Bitwarden. it's on-premise setup looks a bit tricky, so I don't mind purchasing hosted version ^^ nice value for the price.

    There is a project that mimics the upstream Bitwarden called Bitwarden_rs (https://github.com/dani-garcia/Bitwarden_rs) but makes it easier for a self host in a sine homed environment (always suggest taking frequent backups).

    I was previously using Dashlane but at $60/year, it was too pricey for me to continue past my discounted one year. Solid platform just costly to me.

    I installed Bitwarden_rs on my own VPS, it looks good.

  • emgemg Veteran
    edited December 2018

    I use 1Password, but only locally. I do not store passwords on the internet, whether encrypted or not.

    Around 2008 or 2009, I had a very good reason not to trust LastPass. I have avoided it ever since, and recommended 1Password instead. At this point, I don't remember the security issue with LastPass, nor can I say that it is an issue any longer. The LastPass company and product have been around for a long time and undergone a lot of growth and corresponding scrutiny. It is probably as good as any other modern password manager.

    Nonetheless, I would never trust any password manager to store my passwords in a location outside my control, such as a server on the internet. That's true, even if the passwords are encrypted with a well-trusted algorithm, using strong keys that remain in my control.

    The reasons why are many, and I am too lazy to write a detailed list here. Think about the length of time that your password data is available to an adversary (forever!), and the many kinds of vulnerabilities that might be uncovered and exploited throughout that time. Furthermore, consider the possibility that disruptive technologies could appear which may render currently employed encryption moot. Finally, consider the consequences if an attacker gained control of all your passwords. (... and then scale that exploit to millions of other users of the same password manager!)

    I wonder how many encrypted messages older than 50 years are still considered secure, if any? That's 1968!

  • +1 for Bitwarden as well. I'm on the premium plan, which includes TOTP integration so it doubles as a synchronized 2FA app. Unlike Enpass, Bitwarden's browser extension is a full client, and does not require a separate native app to be installed to function.

    If you'd prefer a self-hosted approach, take a look at https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs. It's simpler to deploy and less resource-intensive than the official open-source server.

  • guerrillaguerrilla Member
    edited December 2018
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