Bitwarden users who store their email account credentials within their Bitwarden vaults would have trouble accessing the sent codes if they are unable to log in to their email.

To prevent getting locked out of your vault, be sure you can access the email associated with your Bitwarden account so you can access the emailed codes, or turn on any form of two-step login to not be subject to this process altogether.

  • @CylonBunny
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    314 hours ago

    My email is the only account that isn’t in my password manager. It is by far the most important account because basically all of my other passwords can be changed if someone has my email. My password manager password and my email password are the only 2 I have to remember, and they are both very strong passwords. Remembering 2 strong passwords isn’t much harder than remembering 1 to me.

  • Lurker
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    1 day ago

    Shit no. I can’t access my Email without 2FA. I can’t access my 2FA file without Bitwarden What do I do?

    • @acosmichippo
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      10 hours ago

      use any other 2FA app for your email so you aren’t in a 2FA loop.

    • @[email protected]
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      313 hours ago

      This is one of the reasons my main email is a (unique) password I still memorize, so if my password manager fails catastrophically I can still get in.

      • Rob T Firefly
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        123 hours ago

        I like to just use passwords I know with my brain.

        • @[email protected]
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          422 hours ago

          Thats fine if it works for you.

          My comment on all of this was purely that Bitwarden password was a single point of failure. Now we can shift that single point of failure somewhere else!

          I’m not sure what the solution is.

  • burgersc12
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    17 hours ago

    This is why I turned on 2FA with Aegis soon as I heard this news. I set them up with two passwords I remember well, and have biometrics set on both apps so fingerprint is all I’ll need 9/10 times.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 day ago

    My problem with this is my email accounts are locked behind bitwarden. Can’t login to email without bitwarden. If both my devices get stolen at the same time I’m fucked. I’m not going to pay for premium to enable a emergency contact.

    Downloaded bitwardens authenticatior app. Now firefox on my computer is asking for me to press on a security key which I assume is some sort of biometrics my computer doesn’t have.

    I love 2FA I just don’t see how it is supposed to work if you need bitwarden to open your email to get your 2FA code.

    Let’s say your backpacking through south america and both your devices get robbed. Your ticket home is in your email. What’s the solution here? You can’t go to a coffee shop and login to your email because its securely locked behind bitwarden. You can’t login to bitwarden because you can’t access your 2FA from your email.

    What am I missing?

    • @[email protected]
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      131 day ago

      Use something else for 2fa not email. I used to use keepass for 2fa on my laptop and phone, but now I’m using ente auth. It’s convenient because I can login ente auth anywhere and get a code but the only thing is you’ll need to remember 2 passwords which is worth it imo.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 day ago

        So I need a 2FA application? Just seems a little ridiculous as that is what I use email for. So my bw pass is well over 25 chars and I need to have another app that requires an equally strong pass. Just seems a little overkill! Especially changing passwords every year.

        • exu
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          12 hours ago

          You only need to enter the 2fa code once on a new device. How often do you switch devices for this to be a significant effort?

        • @acosmichippo
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          415 hours ago

          I’d hardly consider it overkill for protecting literally all of your online passwords.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 day ago

      I remember two passwords. My email and my password manager. Oh, and one of my banks.

      Locking the key in the vault, or the backup vault, didn’t make sense to me. It also made sense for me to have access to one bank even if I lose both “vaults”.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 day ago

        My email pass is over 25 more or less random characters that I change about once a year. That’s why I use bitwarden!

    • Fushuan [he/him]
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      31 day ago

      You provided a situation where your phone was robbed and you didn’t plan for it so you didn’t print the relevant information.

      So… Prepare ahead? Go to a relevant office with identification to get access to the relevant tickets again?

      “What can I do if all the tools at my disposal to get the relevant information are stolen?” You get fucked. Idk what else to tell you.

  • Eager Eagle
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    502 days ago

    using a password manager without 2FA is insanity, glad they’re doing it

    • @Giooschi
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      352 days ago

      Insanity is when you lose or can’t access your 2FA device and you’re locked out of your account.

        • @acosmichippo
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          2 days ago

          I can’t believe people are arguing about and downvoting this. Especially for a service that holds all of your passwords, it’s the highest priority thing for you to secure.

          • xigoi
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            116 hours ago

            Me losing my devices is much higher on my threat model than someone trying to brute-force my Bitwarden password.

            • @acosmichippo
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              15 hours ago

              /1. we’ve covered this already. that’s why recovery codes exist.

              /2. losing your device is not a threat to your accounts saved in bitwarden, you’d just have to reset your passwords. it sucks, but that’s not a security threat.

              /3. there’s way more than brute-force attacks out there.

        • @Giooschi
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          162 days ago

          Sounds like a second password then.

          • @acosmichippo
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            232 days ago

            …which you keep in a separate secure location in case you lose your 2FA device.

            • @Giooschi
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              72 days ago

              Why can’t I keep my password in a secure location then?

              • @[email protected]
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                16 hours ago

                shit, why can’t i just keep the secondary password instead of relying on notoriously insecure sms, or notoriously privacy invading email?

                why am i forced in some instances to rely on third parties?

                • @Giooschi
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                  -12 days ago

                  From the wikipedia link you posted:

                  Account recovery typically bypasses mobile-phone two-factor authentication

                  It also lists more advantages than disadvantages.

      • Eager Eagle
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        2 days ago

        insanity is also relying on a single 2FA device, ffs

        • Have multiple factors
        • 3-2-1 vault backups
        • Setup emergency access if you have a person you trust
        • Keep at least one device with BW synced at any moment, so you have offline access
    • @9tr6gyp3
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      62 days ago

      Where do you store your 2FA recovery codes?

      • Fushuan [he/him]
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        1 day ago

        On my home PC. Same with the 2fa export of aegis.

        “What if you can’t access blah”

        There’s a limit to interoperability, if you want access to everything everywhere even when you lose access for whatever reason, you will have to concede security.

        You could save a keepass file with secure notes of both the bitwarden 2fa and recovery codes and save it in drive or whatever, you don’t need passwords nowadays to access the Google account.

        “But what if I lose access to my phone?”

        Well you are fucked, what else do you want? I guess you could print the recovery keys and store them in a secured box at home.

        Edit: I read further down that your comment was meant to incite other to actually think and do stuff. Sorry if I came of rude.

        • @9tr6gyp3
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          62 days ago

          Well thats a good way to lock yourself out of your account!

          • Engywuck
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            142 days ago

            Well, not really. Vault is cached on your devices, so if you have it unlocked or available on one of them you can always use it to check your 2FA.

            By the way, it was a joke. I also use Aegis as a backup.

      • @acosmichippo
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        2 days ago

        two places:

        \1. secure location in your home (physical copy in a safe or a digital copy on an encrypted disk)

        \2. in case of a disaster like a home fire where you lose the 2FA device and local backup: in a remote location such as an encrypted file in a cloud service or at a trusted friend/family’s house.

        • @9tr6gyp3
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          42 days ago

          I know the recommendations. Im suggesting that everyone take a look at those practices and be sure to have them implemented.

          If you’re not printing out the codes on paper and sticking them in a safe deposit box as a remote backup, you’re absolutely risking it.

          • @acosmichippo
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            12 days ago

            ok, sorry for answering what appeared to be a genuine question.

            • @9tr6gyp3
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              12 days ago

              Nah you hit the nail on the head. I 100% agree with you. Sorry if I came off brash.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 day ago

    Sorry, basic question here. I’m running vaultwarden, I host my own vault that bitearden apps access. I don’t think my vault has a mail server, how fucked am I?

    • @[email protected]
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      222 hours ago

      I also host my own vaultwarden and don’t have a mail server. I was able to put SMTP settings in vaultwarden so it’s able to send the email out.

    • Fushuan [he/him]
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      21 day ago

      You can also register a MFA app and lock recovery codes in your PC.

      This has been announced with enough time, you still have time to download another app like aegis or whatever. This is only for new logins however, you will still have access to bitwarden wherever you are already logged on.

      • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
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        21 day ago

        This is the first I’m hearing of this, but, honestly, I’m all for it. I have Aegis and will add this mfa step, but needed to change email anyway and this was a great reminder of that.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 days ago

          Yep so you have to “switch user” after that on computer and mobile where your old email is remembered.

          • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
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            1 day ago

            Sweet! As long as I don’t lose access, I’m good. I’ve been trying to do that for a while, since I lost access to my old email (my own stupid fault), but couldn’t figure out how to do it on the app… because you can’t haha I’ll have to try that through the webapp! Thanks!

            Edit: it worked! Thanks so much!