![]() Open source, look at the code, you can make sure there's nothing there that shouldn't be.Īll up to each person's personal thoughts on security and all that though, so do whatever you feel good and comfortable with. However good it may be, I cannot be 100% sure there isn't some hidden thing or whatever. I won't trust a closed source app keeping all my passwords that runs on my own hardware. I understand that by selfhosting, I get more control, privacy and protection compared to companies, but I also am responsible if things go wrong and I am locked out of everything.Įdit: if going selfhosted, definitely go with opensource. 1Password Business is available for Cloud, Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, iPad and Android. Very easy to set up and manage, the applications are good (there are many clients for each OS so I'm sure there's one you might like) and about the hardest thing is making sure you keep it synced between devices and making sure you back them up. Personally, I use keepass and Google drive (moving to sync thing soon). Depends on your ability with technology and understanding and ability with deploying your own solution, verses using one hosted by another company. The most common replies I see are Bitwarden / Vaultwarden, Keepass, Lastpass. There are a lot of fantastic posts about this on r/opensource r/selfhosted and other similar communities that I cannot remember right now. I have tried almost every major provider out there, including LastPass, bitwarden, dashlane and nordpass and 1Password is the clear winner as far as I can see it. They’re pushing the envelope when it comes to things like passkeys and encryption. SSH Agent: if you are a developer or have some other use case for SSH keys, you can protect your keys using 1password and then use the 1password SSH agent to handle them across multiple devices rather than having to keep ssh configurations updated across environments.1Password can work as a google Authenticator style 2FA and automatically fill in 2FA codes 2FA: built-in 2 factor authentication.Single Sign-On: full support for SSO, for example “sign in with google” - 1Password will remember that I use google to sign in to some other website and automate that process for me.It was much easier to import from 1Password to mSecure than to Bitwarden. Sharing: best sharing UX / workflow for managing shared passwords or to send passwords to other people permanently or temporarily I finally ended up with mSecure and was rather happy with that choice. ![]() Third-Party Support: fully supported by tools such as chezmoi.Command-Line Interface: the 1Password CLI is much better than any other password manager’s CLI.Security: the only provider to offer FULL end to end encryption.That’s so funny, because last year I moved myself and all my family members from LastPass premium to 1Password because I am an app developer and one of the 1Password devs was a guest speaker on one of the programming podcasts I listen to regularly. ![]()
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