A review of my experience with Bitwarden after several years of self-hosting it, and why I decided to move away from the password manager.
Note: this is not my article.
A review of my experience with Bitwarden after several years of self-hosting it, and why I decided to move away from the password manager.
Note: this is not my article.
But what if you don’t want to self host your password manager?
Any non terrible choices?
I don’t think Bitwarden is a terrible choice. That said, I share the author’s concerns in general.
How much does a non-selfhosted password manager cost? Weigh that against the cost of remote-mountable server storage, you can simply put your database there.
(Both costs can be 0 btw)
The real cost is time and reliability, not money.
Initially, yes, but no more once you got it working
Passbolt seems to be a upcoming competitor. It’s EU based, OSS, etc., but has not been audited as much as BW and has not achieved feature parity so far.
But it looks very promising.
I prefer 1Password. They use a secure encryption key together with your master password. If you lose the encryption key, your data can’t be recovered. The key is only needed during the initial setup annd after that you unlock the vault on your device with your master password.
This means if their database ever gets hacked, your data is encrypted in a way that not even you could get at unless you have that secure key.
Is it open source? If not you can’t know what they use there, just what they tell you to sell their stuff.
Then literally no one can answer the question presented.
If we leave out Bitwarden, yes. Doesn’t make proprietary password managers any better.
? What even is this, they asked what options there were, I gave them my opinion, and you’re jumping down my throat for not giving the only partially open source option.
You gave your opinion, I gave my opinion that what you suggest is way worse than the alternatives. Don’t understand why are you upset.
Enpass works well for me across platforms.
Use yubikeys
ProtonPass