What Password Manager are you Using?

Using Bitwarden now. Thinking about switching to Proton Pass once they add a few features I've been waiting for. Can't go wrong with either and both have generous free plans
 
While no data is lost or penetrated. Even if 1Password’s encrypted data in the 2023 Okta breach, exposed metadata and third-party risks (like Okta and Sisense) can still enable phishing or account attacks.
 
I am using bitwarden for over 6 months now with their paid plan because it was decently priced at $10 a year and I want like to support this open source project. The subscription adds passkeys and an encrypted vault for storing files but I feel the vault interface is not very intuitive though. But as a password manager it is solid. The free version has all the features of the paid one sans the vault and 2fa/passkeys support so it's great.
 
I might be in the minority here.. But I use dashlane.. Have tried switching to bitwarden and lastpass but they would sometimes just not do proper autofill (sometimes they will not detect the fields at all) and dashlane has been working fine for me since past 4-5 years.. I also have access to keeper, but I haven't tried it as of yet, will try that once my current plan expires :)
 
Call me paranoid, but I stick with Keepass on all platforms / devices with manual sync of the password DB as and when needed. A master copy of the DB is always kept up to date in the NAS.
 
I might be in the minority here.. But I use dashlane.. Have tried switching to bitwarden and lastpass but they would sometimes just not do proper autofill (sometimes they will not detect the fields at all) and dashlane has been working fine for me since past 4-5 years.. I also have access to keeper, but I haven't tried it as of yet, will try that once my current plan expires :)
Dashlane has had a couple of security breaches in the past iirc. And when it comes to something so critical as a password manager, I am not taking chances with anything proprietary. Open source, E2E encryption is a must. The bigger the open source project, the better.

Call me paranoid, but I stick with Keepass on all platforms / devices with manual sync of the password DB as and when needed. A master copy of the DB is always kept up to date in the NAS.
I've always wondered how manually syncing Keepass is beneficial over any other service that's E2E encrypted (and we can prove that there's no funny business going on by looking at the code). Care to elaborate?
 
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I've always wondered how manually syncing Keepass is beneficial over any other service that's E2E encrypted (and we can prove that there's no funny business going on by looking at the code). Care to elaborate?
It suits my risk appetite. I did not say it is for everyone.
Moreover, it involves very little additional effort. All devices which connect to my home network access the shared DB in NAS. Keepass automatically syncs from multiple connections. Only the one in my mobile, needs a manual sync-up periodically.
 
I've always wondered how manually syncing Keepass is beneficial over any other service that's E2E encrypted (and we can prove that there's no funny business going on by looking at the code). Care to elaborate?
For me its the advantage of having access to my password manager even when im offline, i think bitwarden stores it locally but i believe you cannot add new entries until you are online, which also means that if bitwarden is down for any reason, i cant add new entries.
And for syncing i use syncthing.