I recommend Keepass, but you might have different requirements.
This video serves as a good comparison of your options and on this website you can find a list of recommendation for password managers and other privacy/security tools.
It has a dark theme, apps for everything (including Linux commandline), the Firefox extension autofills with a keyboard shortcut, plus I don’t remember any large data breaches.
Whatever you use, remember to backup your vault regularly. A cautionary tale:
I lost access to my bitwarden vault containing a private key to a few thousand $ worth of crypto, after changing my master password to something that I was then not able to recall perfectly. And bitwarden’s website / extension start to rate limit you client-side after failed attempts. So instead, after a lot of research I was able to find the bitwarden hashfile on my computer where chrome stores data for its extensions. I then downloaded hashcat and tried to do a dictionary attack and some other clever attacks that made use of what I thought my password was supposed to be, but to no success.
Don’t be me. Bitwarden lets you download your encrypted vault from the website or CLI. do that.
Any suggestions for password management?
I recommend Keepass, but you might have different requirements.
This video serves as a good comparison of your options and on this website you can find a list of recommendation for password managers and other privacy/security tools.
I’ve been well served by Bitwarden: https://bitwarden.com/
It has a dark theme, apps for everything (including Linux commandline), the Firefox extension autofills with a keyboard shortcut, plus I don’t remember any large data breaches.
I really like 1Password, but my understanding is that Bitwarden has less frequent reported vulnerabilities
Whatever you use, remember to backup your vault regularly. A cautionary tale:
I lost access to my bitwarden vault containing a private key to a few thousand $ worth of crypto, after changing my master password to something that I was then not able to recall perfectly. And bitwarden’s website / extension start to rate limit you client-side after failed attempts. So instead, after a lot of research I was able to find the bitwarden hashfile on my computer where chrome stores data for its extensions. I then downloaded hashcat and tried to do a dictionary attack and some other clever attacks that made use of what I thought my password was supposed to be, but to no success.
Don’t be me. Bitwarden lets you download your encrypted vault from the website or CLI. do that.