I’m using 1Password with local sync over the built-in web server. 1Passwords also supports syncing via Dropbox, iCloud and, most recently, 1Passwords’s own servers. I want nothing of that but it means that I can’t use 1Password on Linux. What’s great about 1Password is that it is highly polished - using it adds very little friction. I understand that I could manage all passwords encrypted in Git but the integration would never be as good and there is a lot of risk that this would somehow not be as secure as it sounds.
This is a closed-source app that has not yet received a lot of scrutiny. Using it for truly sensitive information requires quite a bit of trust. They claim to use sqlite with encryption – which I would trust but of course, there is a lot of code around it that would have to be trusted as well.
1Password (at least the hosted version) has linux support via both 1password-x and 1password-cli. I quite enjoy the CLI and generally find that it has a better user experience than LastPass.
I’m using 1Password with local sync over the built-in web server. 1Passwords also supports syncing via Dropbox, iCloud and, most recently, 1Passwords’s own servers. I want nothing of that but it means that I can’t use 1Password on Linux. What’s great about 1Password is that it is highly polished - using it adds very little friction. I understand that I could manage all passwords encrypted in Git but the integration would never be as good and there is a lot of risk that this would somehow not be as secure as it sounds.
I recently switched to Enpass, which is a conceptual clone of 1Password. Reason for switching was Linux support.
This is a closed-source app that has not yet received a lot of scrutiny. Using it for truly sensitive information requires quite a bit of trust. They claim to use sqlite with encryption – which I would trust but of course, there is a lot of code around it that would have to be trusted as well.
The first thing it tried to do when I ran it was reach out to Google Analytics. I said enough of that, and promptly uninstalled it.
1Password (at least the hosted version) has linux support via both 1password-x and 1password-cli. I quite enjoy the CLI and generally find that it has a better user experience than LastPass.