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General Security Discussions
How secure are free Password Managers
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<blockquote data-quote="Threadripper" data-source="post: 824268" data-attributes="member: 78223"><p>Bitwarden is probably the least targeted "known" password manager, if you use 2FA and a good master password (which are vital, of course) and change your KDF iterations to a million, good luck to any attacker. Every password manager I've ever known uses 100K KDF iterations, and I'm aware of none that allow you to change that figure other than Bitwarden. Open source, audited, it's the best you're going to get.</p><p></p><p>Premium is also cheap at $10/year which allows you to use hardware 2FA (Yubikeys, etc.) and 1GB of secure cloud storage where I house my recovery codes (as well as locally), it also allows you to store your TOTP keys there to replace any 2FA app you use. Top notch.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Threadripper, post: 824268, member: 78223"] Bitwarden is probably the least targeted "known" password manager, if you use 2FA and a good master password (which are vital, of course) and change your KDF iterations to a million, good luck to any attacker. Every password manager I've ever known uses 100K KDF iterations, and I'm aware of none that allow you to change that figure other than Bitwarden. Open source, audited, it's the best you're going to get. Premium is also cheap at $10/year which allows you to use hardware 2FA (Yubikeys, etc.) and 1GB of secure cloud storage where I house my recovery codes (as well as locally), it also allows you to store your TOTP keys there to replace any 2FA app you use. Top notch. [/QUOTE]
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