I’ve always hated the idea of using a subscription/cloud hosting for password management. I feel like I should have a LOT more control over that stuff and I don’t really want to hand all my keys over to a company.

All my secrets have been going in a highly encrypted archive with a long passphrase, but obviously that isn’t convenient on all devices. It’s been fine, I can open it on any computer but it’s not super quick. It does have the advantage of being able to put in multiple files, notes, private keys but it’s not ideal.

Anyway, finally found something that isn’t subscription, and has a similar philosophy - a highly encrypted archive file, and it’s open source and has heaps of clients including web browser plugins so it’s usable anywhere, and you can sync the vault with any file sync you like.

Thought you guys might appreciate the find, password managers have always been a bit of a catch 22 for me.

Note for android i found keepassxc the best app, and i’m using KeePassHelper browser plugin, and the KeePassXc desktop app as well as the free official one. Apps all seem to be cross platform.

  • Ashu
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    1 year ago

    Why did people stop using notepads (actual physical ones) for this? No digital storage, no leaks. Besides, after a couple of times you get the muscle memory of typing in the passwords anyway.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 year ago

      I have a different password for each service I use. Each password is 30+ characters long and completely random with letters, numbers and special characters. There’s no way I could remember any of them and they’d be a hell to type out manually. I use KeePass on every device I own and it’s synced over my NAS. So it’s super convenient and no risk for leaks.

    • @PlutoniumAcid
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      81 year ago

      My password manager contains about 600 passwords by now. I use 30+ passwords on a daily basis for work (IT industry) so no chance in hell that I’ll remember half of those. And the ones I need maybe once a year?? Good luck without a manager.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Tell me you use the same password everywhere without telling me you use the same password everywhere

    • @CarbonatedPastaSauce
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      41 year ago

      I did this, stored in an encrypted container, for a long time. Problem is it’s not scalable unless you start reusing passwords across different sites and services, which is itself a terrible practice.

      Switched to Bitwarden (self hosted) several months ago and am very happy with it.

    • Rootiest
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      1 year ago

      I’m using randomly generated 64-character passwords with upper/lower-case letters, numbers, and symbols.

      I prefer not to manually enter them every time.

      Also someone could find and photograph your notepad and then all your passwords are compromised in one go.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Try to remember (2m(&$9hso2 Ok_(#
      We will see how fast you can remember that after a long and mentally exhausting work day :)