thank you.

  • callyral
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    181 year ago

    I personally switched from it to Keepass, it is cross-platform, open-source and pretty secure. It doesn’t come with cloud support, but I guess you could just put the file in some sort of cloud storage you trust. It also supports one-time authentication codes!

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      I’ve been using keepass for years. I use syncthing to keep the copy of the db on my phone and laptop and backup synced.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      The big downside of this is when you need to log in to some web site when being away from your computer.

      Then you have to transfer your entire database to some other computer and make sure it’s deleted afterwards in a secure way. Much more risky than using Bitwarden I believe.

      I guess you can skip the deletion part if you trust there is no way to decrypt the db file in the future.

      • Rootiest
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        11 year ago

        On the rare occasion I need that, I just run KeePassDX Portable from a flash drive.

        But really it’s a bit risky to use any password manager on a device you don’t control.

        At least my KeePass database is secured with my YubiKey so it’s not likely anyone will get in if they do stumble onto my DB file.

    • feugnis
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      21 year ago

      I tried keepass but then switched to vaultwarden.