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Enpass Lifetime Deal seems to be shortly back in stock after having been removed previously

YmpkerYmpker Member

After Enpass has removed the lifetime deal from their Website and Stacksocial a while ago (to my knowledge), it seems to be now temporarily back on their official website for some 64€:
https://www.enpass.io/pricing/

Comments

  • akhfaakhfa Member

    Curious how much is it previously?

  • YmpkerYmpker Member
    edited March 29

    @akhfa said:
    Curious how much is it previously?

    I think, like 5+ years ago when I got it, it was 40$ish on Stacksocial? That said, lifetime price before was always around 70€ on Enpass website if I recall, so this Easter sale may really be a "promo" You could check ArchiveOrg or smth to compare

  • KyzKyz Member

    i'm curious, is it better to use this rather than my own self-hosted vaultwarden+bitwarden

    Thanked by 2lovelyserver Cybr
  • CybrCybr Member

    @Kyz said:
    i'm curious, is it better to use this rather than my own self-hosted vaultwarden+bitwarden

    I'm struggling to comprehend why anyone would pay for something like enpass...

    Bitwarden's free hosted service includes all the features most people ever need, and Vaultwarden allows those of us who would rather self-host to have full control over our data and also use the few extra paid features for free too.

    Thanked by 1whynotlearn
  • @Kyz said:
    i'm curious, is it better to use this rather than my own self-hosted vaultwarden+bitwarden

    Better is relative to your usecase and threat model. Pro of enpass is can use own storage for the vault, webdav, dropbox or even local. But might aswell use the foss, free keepass for that. I use bitwarden myself because i can't be bothered to manage my own pw manager vault. Email and pw manager are the only 2 thing I'd never want to selfhost or self manage.

  • YmpkerYmpker Member
    edited March 29

    @Cybr said:

    @Kyz said:
    i'm curious, is it better to use this rather than my own self-hosted vaultwarden+bitwarden

    I'm struggling to comprehend why anyone would pay for something like enpass...

    Pretty much because back then I thought it had all the features I wanted, while not requiring me to self-host (didn't want to selfhost my pw manager). Didn't know about Bitwarden/Vaultwarden back then and Keepass seemed good but not polished enough for me back then. As Engpass lifetime was only like 30-40€ and have no regret regarding the purchase yet. I acknowledge Vaultwarden/Bitwarden is a great alternative that is appreciated by many members of the community. Maybe some time, I will check it out, but so far Enpass works fine for me.

    Like @blip1945 said, Enpass also offers local/wifi sync and cloud sync.

    Bitwarden's free hosted service includes all the features most people ever need, and Vaultwarden allows those of us who would rather self-host to have full control over our data and also use the few extra paid features for free too.

    Thanked by 1Cybr
  • JosephFJosephF Member

    What are the best options today for whether various use cases?

  • Why would anyone buy this over protonpass? This is cheaper by 100eur but still.

  • JosephFJosephF Member
    edited March 29

    If someone is currently using Google Password Manager, is there any compelling reasons to change (and what are they)?

    And if one does change, and is looking for the same ease of use and no self-hosting, what is the best option?

  • I use ProtonPass, Sticky Password, DashLane, HeyLogin & BitWarden.
    Now i think i need enpass to save passwords of my password manager.

    Jokes apart, Dashlane is 6 months free, refer 6-7 friends in your group & you are good to go for 3-4 years.
    You get 6 months free for each friend. I tried almost all of the password manager in the market.
    Nothing beats Dashlane & Lastpass. Majorly due to speed.
    HeyLogin is also good, but may not be suitable for all usecases.

    Thanked by 2Ympker cxg
  • @JosephF said:
    If someone is currently using Google Password Manager, is there any compelling reasons to change (and what are they)?

    And if one does change, and is looking for the same ease of use and no self-hosting, what is the best option?

    Google & Apple password managers are not safe enough. May be for me, as anyone having your device in hand can easily access them. But password managers are locked.

    Also sharing password is very easy in dashlane & others. Just click share, select the user or enter mail & its done.

    Password managers works perfectly on all apps, devices. No OS restrictions or app restrictions.

    Thanked by 1JosephF
  • JosephFJosephF Member

    @sitepape said:
    I use ProtonPass, Sticky Password, DashLane, HeyLogin & BitWarden.
    Now i think i need enpass to save passwords of my password manager.

    Jokes apart, Dashlane is 6 months free, refer 6-7 friends in your group & you are good to go for 3-4 years.
    You get 6 months free for each friend. I tried almost all of the password manager in the market.
    Nothing beats Dashlane & Lastpass. Majorly due to speed.
    HeyLogin is also good, but may not be suitable for all usecases.

    How do you look Sticky Password compared to the others?

  • @JosephF said:

    @sitepape said:
    I use ProtonPass, Sticky Password, DashLane, HeyLogin & BitWarden.
    Now i think i need enpass to save passwords of my password manager.

    Jokes apart, Dashlane is 6 months free, refer 6-7 friends in your group & you are good to go for 3-4 years.
    You get 6 months free for each friend. I tried almost all of the password manager in the market.
    Nothing beats Dashlane & Lastpass. Majorly due to speed.
    HeyLogin is also good, but may not be suitable for all usecases.

    How do you look Sticky Password compared to the others?

    It also does the job, but i am not sure why i can't trust it fully. My team mate is using it & he is happy with sticky password.
    He was hard core dashlane fan, but they increased the price, so he had to shift to sticky password.
    If i offer him dashlane again, he will jump on it xD.

    One great feature that sticky password has is portable software. You can carry your password manager in a pendrive also. .

    Thanked by 1JosephF
  • WebProjectWebProject Veteran, 🚩 Host Rep Tag Suspended

    Personally I like the Enpass, using for over 2 years now and I like it especially the passwords over 28 characters, 2FA & passkeys and ability to backup to various location + multi OS support.

    Thanked by 2Ympker lala_th
  • wii747wii747 Member

    Is this better then Bitwarden?

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