Recently, I found myself in need of storing passwords for multiple applications. They range from client passwords to internal tools. Managing these passwords has been a pain. I love LastPass but was wondering what is everyone else's solution?
Our current process is pass secure data around using AWS KMS but once it gets to me I then need to store that somewhere. It would be nice to have a tool that easily separated secure data by client or internal. Thoughts?
Latest comments (14)
Migrate from KeePassX to Microsoft Edge Password Manager.
HashiCorp Vault
keepassxc.org/
Open-source & encrypted, you can have separated databases for your passwords :)
Bitwarden because it's free (Lastpass before)
Lastpass
+1 for Bitwarden. Not necessarily something I'd recommend to my mom, but definitely to someone tech-savvy. Open-source, dirt-cheap, and nice ability to save "secure notes" (as well as credit cards, IDs, normal username/password combos, and even 2FA TOTPs so you don't have to pull out your phone). Browser extension, desktop app, awesome password generator with all the options you need, keyboard shortcuts...it does it all. Way better than my experience with LastPass.
Also let's you create teams/orgs so you can keep your personal keys/passwords separate from your work.
Solo dev here... actual site passwords (bitbucket, stripe, DO, etc.) are in 1Password. But server credentials (IPs, sudo, db, etc.) I've just been storing with SnippetsLab locally. I guess I could move them over to 1P, but as long as I'm solo, it works for me.
Bitwarden is open source with a premium plan.
bitwarden.com
For the last year, LastPass... Pretty happy with it, notes, addresses, cards, shared across devices. I just love how it's developed around the idea of "Trust no one" and it makes me feel pretty safe. And the master password I don't store it anywhere, it's mostly in my brain, I have just a paper with some questions and hints hidden in a drawer, in case of a memory failure...
Same here. Would add that in addition to my brain, I store my master password in LastPass and share it with my significant other (no secrets, right). If both of us forget our master passwords, then we're screwed but that hasn't happened yet.
1Password could be a very good option. Its secure, easy to use and comes with a lot of useful features. Not to mention it offers one of the best encryption methods (256-bit AES) and 2Factor Auth.