• @[email protected]
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    -377 hours ago

    Why would anyone trust any company with their passwords??

    Just use keepass and not bother with BS

    • @CarbonatedPastaSauce
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      224 hours ago

      Bitwarden can be fully self hosted, I’m doing it. My Bitwarden server doesn’t (and can’t) talk to them at all as it has no way to access the internet. They know nothing about my deployment except that I signed up for a free license key.

    • @Telodzrum
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      496 hours ago

      Because most people need a cloud solution for synchronization across devices. Unless you’re spinning up your own service like Nextcloud or similar for this, relying on a commercial cloud storage service for storing the file is just as dangerous (perhaps more so, as your attack surface is now across two third party services) as relying on someone like Bitwarden or Lastpass.

      • @[email protected]
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        -105 hours ago

        There’s a big difference. You trust entities like bitwarden/lastpass/etc to properly encrypt the data, protect your master key, and trust their entire architecture behind the scenes.

        When you encrypt the keepass DB that’s all done by you locally with a open source client. No one knows your master key, and you get a simple encrypted file. You can hand that file to hackers if you want, will be useless without the key.

        I put one of the copies of my keepass on onedrive, and syncs perfectly across all devices.

        Companies can enshiffity at a moments notice.

        • Dark Arc
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          14
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          4 hours ago

          I do not trust bitwarden to encrypt my data anymore than anyone trusts keypass to encrypt my data.

          They’re both open source and they both do the encryption locally; you’re plainly mistaken.

        • Lettuce eat lettuce
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          154 hours ago

          Lol, imagine ridiculing users for trusting an FOSS company to handle their password management, and then storing your encrypted password DB in Microsoft’s OneDrive 😆

          • @[email protected]
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            -64 hours ago

            I knew a comment like this was coming, but unless you can show how microsoft can decrypt my kdbx I stand fully by my current setup.

            • Lettuce eat lettuce
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              102 hours ago

              I don’t think Microsoft can decrypt your DB file, neither do I think Bitwarden can. Encryption happens locally on their open source clients too.

              But I’m not the one disparaging trusting an open source program to securely encrypt passwords, you are.

            • Bezier
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              42 hours ago

              Could you please show how bitwarden can decrypt a vault that’s locally encrypted by a foss client?

              “Imagine trusting any company with your passwords”

    • @kameecoding
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      316 hours ago

      Are you a software developer ? Because you are way out of touch with what users want.

    • Noxy
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      44 hours ago

      cuz being able to log in is handy sometimes

    • @Contravariant
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      96 hours ago

      Well, who did you trust to build your hardware?

    • @[email protected]
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      96 hours ago

      I used to use Keepass and sync thing and would consistently run into conflicts between my desktop and mobile entries. Maybe there’s a better way to do it that I’m missing, but that was very annoying