- Bitwarden all day every day. I don’t even know any of my passwords because they’re all randomly generated. Try to guess my password now hacker man - yup randomly generated 20+ digit passwords are the way to go 
 
- KeePassXC here. Locally encrypted, Locally stored, cloud backup of an encrypted file, synced with SyncThing to mobile devices. I will never trust nor recommend a cloud based manager with all the breaches. - This is the way. 
- Yeah, KeePassXC + SyncThing all day every day. Can’t in good conscience trust someone else with my sensitive data, even if I encrypt it before it gets to their servers. My database is keys-to-the-kingdom level shit. 
- Oh yeah, someone, finally :D KeepassXC on PC, KeepassDX on Android, Syncthing for synchronization. I like when my password is just one file, that I can easily backup, not some cloud thing 🙂 
- This is the way. 
 
- A password manager is an absolute must, in my opinion! I use Bitwarden and love it. 
- Everyone should be using a password manager. Every service should have a different password (and some service should have several passwords) and it’s impossible for the average person to keep track of all of those. Every time I hear about someone losing control of an account it’s because they were using the same password as another service. - I recommend: - KeePassDX: Can be completely offline. Probably the most secure but can be a little awkward to use sometimes.
- Bitwarden: Cloud based but open source. You could run a server but the main service offers MOST of the features for free.
 - Your mileage may very with some of the proprietary platforms. However my job uses 1 Password and it seems to be fairly safe. 
- Bitwarden, all the way. 
- Bitwarden is really great imo. - Selfhosting it is even better - deleted by creator 
 
 
- Password manager-less life with notebooks and reused passwords is life in the stone age. If you or anyone you know isn’t using one, get on bitwarden. - Everyone knows why password manageras are absolutely essential, but here’s an often neglected perk: I can list every site I ever signed up to. Wanna delete some old accounts? “Did you sign up to X yet?” Simples. 
- I’m in the Bitwarden camp. There is no other way for me to have complex/secure passwords and remember them for my gazillion accounts. 
- I know a lot of people are saying Bitwarden, but I’ve been using 1Password for 4 years and Bitwarden just isn’t a viable replacment. - 1Password looks much more modern and their organizational tools are not present at all in Bitwarden. I can’t even sort by date created or modified in Bitwarden. - Not using a password manager is like not having locks on a house. Everyone should have one and if you don’t, you’re risking a lot of valuable stuff being taken from you. 
- I use Bitwarden! - I like that I can share password with my team. :) 
- Yes, do it! Now! It’s the safest way, but only by choosing the right and trusted ones. Examples: - The expensive but good one: 1Password
- The free, geeky and difficult one for normal users: Keepass.
- The simple and free and beloved one: Bitwarden
- The don’t try it ever because they will leak your data: Lastpass.
 - The simple and free and beloved one - You’re not giving Bitwarden much credit here. It’s really great. 
 
- One another Bitwarden user chiming in! - I started with LastPass but they started making things difficult enough on the mobile side that I decided to jump ships. Bitwarden also is a smoother app to use - LastPass felt clunkier (I’ve used only the free side on both). 
- Been using 1password family subscription for years. Absolutely swear by it. 
- I use Bitwarden. Used to use Last pass, but that got crappy a while back. 
- Over the last 15 years or so I’ve moved from 1Password to LastPass to Bitwarden. I don’t know how anyone manages without them. 













