frontpageTattyBear | Staff posted Aug 12, 2025 08:53 PM
Item 1 of 2
Item 1 of 2
frontpageTattyBear | Staff posted Aug 12, 2025 08:53 PM
1-Year 1Password Manager Subscription: Families Plan $30, Personal Plan
(New Users)$18
$36
50% off1Password
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It would be nice to have the option to keep vaults locally, but I'm not worried about it being on the cloud with 1passwords secret key architecture. It's convenient for using vaults for build servers/deployments as SMB too.
I pay for 1password so they can worry about securing and keeping secure their platform and data. I can easily self host Vaultwarden or Bitwarden to keep the data fully in my hands, but I don't want to risk/go through the hassle of potentially losing it for whatever reason. I also don't want to worry about a backup plan, maintaining, securing or any of those kinds of logistics. 99.999% of the time is smooth sailing, but 0.001% is still too much risk vs time to get back.
It is "yet another subscription", but it's one of my highest value subscriptions.
Bitwarden is $10 a year and does almost everything 1Pass can do. $18 for a year of 1Pass is the correct price for the product, IMO, but not their full price. So I will stick with Bitwarden.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ferganer
For us, the brainless dumbos, with dozens, if not hundreds, of accounts that need frequently updated and less memorizable (and brute forceable) passwords, these come in handy.
But I agree with others, Bitworden's UI is less polished, but it's at least as good of a password manager as this
Also fu Lastpass for making me switch lol
I was using free Lastpass for a while and I started to pay for family pack. I tried one or two other providers but I didn't like it. Any enhancement that your new app offer, any insight would be appreciated.
Were you looking for new function that was missing in Lastpass?
What issue did you have with Lastpass? I am just curious.
I was using free Lastpass for a while and I started to pay for family pack. I tried one or two other providers but I didn't like it. Any enhancement that your new app offer, any insight would be appreciated.
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I have my own way of storing my passwords which works well enough, but over the past couple of years pretty much every app or website now requires dual-factor authentication, where even after I enter my username and password, I still then have to go to my email, or go to my text messages, or go to a notification on my phone, or put my left leg in, take my right hand out, and do the hokey pokey, before I am allowed to login. Only then am I allow to order a taco from Taco Bell.
The stupid tech calisthenics I have to do with everything is really starting to chap my ass. Does using a solution like this get rid of that requirement? Actually entering my username and password is not a huge deal to me.
Stop buying from Taco Bell. There, problem solved. (maybe it was their grade-F meat and laxative sauces causing your "ass to be chapped")
My point stands, though. Everything from my bank, to U-Haul, to fast food joints, to Microsoft, to a ton of other services all require dual-factor authentication now, which I would argue is actually more of a hassle than a password because it makes it very difficult to share my login credentials with family, and makes it a pain to actually access any of my own information when sitting down at my computer to try and get some stuff done. I would pay for a service that makes it so I don't have to do those things anymore. But handling my passwords in and of itself isn't actually that difficult. Does 1Password help with that?
Inb4 "removing dual-factor authentication greatly reduces security." Yes, I know.
The security key is what differentiates 1Password from all the other password managers.
Your password and the security key together provide end-to-end encryption, so 1Password doesn't have access to your data, and even if your data was leaked in a security breach and you were using a weak (crackable) password, the data still couldn't be decrypted without your security key.
1Password doesn't know your security key or even your password — they use a model where your password is never actually transmitted over the internet.
The security key is a code you write down or print out and store in a safe place. It's required the first time you set up each new device, but if you have another device already set up (like your phone with you), you just use that to get the key.
Apple Passwords also uses e2ee so Apple never has access to your passwords (and your data would be safer in a breach), but they manage the keys themselves rather than giving you control. If your Apple Account gets compromised, your keys get compromised. If your 1Password credentials get compromised, someone still would need your security key to gain access.
No, I'm not supporting the developers. I work in software. If you're not delivering new features useful for the end customer, said end customer will not pay you. Same applies for 1Password.
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