ModerateImprovement to [email protected]English • 9 months agoGoogle Says Sorry After Passwords Vanish For 15 Million Windows Users.www.forbes.comexternal-linkmessage-square189fedilinkarrow-up1598cross-posted to: [email protected][email protected]
arrow-up1598external-linkGoogle Says Sorry After Passwords Vanish For 15 Million Windows Users.www.forbes.comModerateImprovement to [email protected]English • 9 months agomessage-square189fedilinkcross-posted to: [email protected][email protected]
minus-squareChaotic EntropylinkfedilinkEnglish24•9 months agoPremium Bitwarden is so cheap and effective that I find it difficult to justify using an alternative.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•9 months agoI use encfs and sync it to dropbox etc. Then use gopass password manager to store password in the encfs folders. Not fully auto-integrated but good enough for me.
minus-squareGregorlinkfedilinkEnglish2•9 months agoI self host my own Vaultwarden instance (a bitwarden server written in Rust) and it’s more reliable than Google’s password manager.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish9•9 months agoNot a bad idea to back up to a json, but every computer you’ve used has a local encrypted copy you can export from using the app or extension.
minus-squareChaotic EntropylinkfedilinkEnglish8•9 months agoWell sure… I have a local offline encrypted copy, rather than a whole separate password manager.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish11•edit-29 months agoKeepass with syncthing is completely free and doesn’t rely on cloud hosting
Premium Bitwarden is so cheap and effective that I find it difficult to justify using an alternative.
I use encfs and sync it to dropbox etc. Then use gopass password manager to store password in the encfs folders. Not fully auto-integrated but good enough for me.
I self host my own Vaultwarden instance (a bitwarden server written in Rust) and it’s more reliable than Google’s password manager.
Still. Back it up
Not a bad idea to back up to a json, but every computer you’ve used has a local encrypted copy you can export from using the app or extension.
Well sure… I have a local offline encrypted copy, rather than a whole separate password manager.
Keepass with syncthing is completely free and doesn’t rely on cloud hosting