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Wow, so 1Password is not recommended anymore? How come? I’ve been using them for years.

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Possibly because it is not open source and doesn’t have anything to offer that the other recommendations do not.

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Ya I think so. These are always tech articles and Foss software is always a big feature.

But 1password has on going audits and a sane ui and mobile apps that pass the boomer-parent test. Canadian company too which is nice given the US centric tech world.

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I use it because I share an account with my parents, so I can manage their stuff. My fathers old local Pw-Manager was a mess.

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have being using Enpass for a long time, it’s really good, you can choose any cloud provider or host your vault yourself, subscription based payment or one time only

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I am also using Enpass since a decade or so and never had the urge to switch to another provider. Everything works, you got all the features (TOTP, pawned password auto-checks, native apps and autofill, storage of other things than passwords; …) and pricing is still very reasonable.

It can be fully used offline too (with WiFi sync) or with any local storage or online cloud option.

I bought it one time back then but still pay the small subscription fee since I don’t want Enpass to go away.

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Many of these tools share practically the same set of features, so I like Enpass’s ability to store files (i.e. certificates) and any kind of key/value pairs even more.

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15 years ago the common logic was the most likely way for a password to get stolen is by writing it down and leaving it in an accessible spot, and somebody stealing the password there.

I don’t think that logic holds anymore, and with the LastPass breach I think that’s proof you want to step away from the cloud not towards it. Imo the most secure way to store passwords is to generate multiple random codes, use a portion of each and then just write those down.

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You can also use a password manager that’s not connected to a cloud. Or an encrypted usb stick. The problem with writing it on paper is, that people tend to use too short passwords or repeated passphrases. Using a really long master key and a key file with an encrypted database is safer than a cloud.

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Quick question - any issue with just saving passwords on Firefox? I use FF across all my devices and the sync between them without the need of an extra app is super convenient.

Or am I just being naive?

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On Desktop you should set a Primary Password , then it is very secure.

https://support.mozilla.org/kb/use-primary-password-protect-stored-logins-and-pas

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Privacy

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