I’m currently using 1Password but I’m no longer satisfied with it.

  • ZenArtist
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    171 year ago

    I’ll play the devil’s advocate here.

    Since bitwarden is a VC funded company, I’m wary of the enshittification that might take place in the future. Even though technically speaking, you can self-host the server via Vaultwarden, it is largely possible because the project has blessing of official devs. That can change dramatically in future.

    For something as important as your passwords, trusting a for-profit company might not be the best idea.

    Would love to know what the community thinks about this.

    DISCLAIMER: I love Bitwarden and use it daily, both for personal use and at work.

    • @ebits21@lemmy.ca
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      151 year ago

      While true, you can easily migrate your data elsewhere in such a scenario.

      If that changes they’re dead to me.

    • @Logster998@sh.itjust.works
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      101 year ago

      The VC money has gone to good though, like audits and open source code. A lot of the money they get is from company deals with bitwarden buisness anyway. As long as that works out, I can’t see them screwing over anyone while they have a money stream. If they do screw up, exporting to KeyPassXC is super easy anyway.

      • @dngray@lemmy.oneM
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        11 year ago

        KeyPassXC is super easy

        One of the things I dislike about KeepassXC is that it exports to a unstructured CSV file, whereas Bitwarden exports to JSON. It’s a lot easier to use something like jq to parse a JSON structure, if you want to import it somewhere as opposed to dealing with CSV files.

        I also found the importer for Keepass CSV in Bitwarden didn’t import my “notes” and I had to individually check that for each record.