![]() ![]() ![]() Bitwarden stickers on my laptop, casual recommendations to friends/family, I've even created a presentation for work encouraging employees to use it in their personal lives (Too many stickies floating around the office with people's work AND personal email passwords. I'm thinking about buying a Yubikey too, but it's another problem.īitwarden improves my life so much I shill hardcore for them at every opportunity. But reassure me, please.Įdit: thanks for your answers, I am more serene now. Really, I don't want to shoot at Bitwarden or any other password manager. allegations by people online we don't even know personally? What will keep Bitwarden from going insane and do something like : "You want your passwords? Haha, now pay me 100 bitcoins". So why are we trusting Bitwarden all our passwords? Because it's open source? Because everyone is parotting that it's good, it's well protected because of "idunnowhatencryptionsorcery" and good policy and ethics? What proof do we have? Some. "If it's free, you are the product." That saying is common sense here, in the internet. The problem is that now, I have some doubt. And I decided to trust Bitwarden.īitwarden is so popular: it's free, open source and seems trustworthy. But then, I read a comic from XKCD and articles about how password manager are better, etc. As a long time non-user of password manager, I tended to trust my human memory to remember my password, and in my mind, those passwords were quite challenging to guess. I joined Bitwarden recently and I would like you to reasure me. ![]()
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