

Plugins – KeePass | KeePass Plugins and Extensions Master Key – KeePass | KeePass Help Center Introduction – KeePass | KeePass Help Centerįirst Steps Tutorial – KeePass | KeePass Help Center Half-hearted means are the cause of accidents and incidents. Should understand the importance of passwords correctly and choose “robust and reliable means” from the viewpoint of trouble prevention. are incomplete and vulnerable, so they are not recommended (It is recommended to stop using them). Password managers that come with browsers, security solutions, VPNs, etc. The importance of “passwords” goes without saying.įrom that point of view, “distributed risk management” should be thoroughly implemented, and the means to do so should be to complete management with the dedicated standalone applications “KeePass Password Safe” or “Bitwarden”. Most end users consider passwords to be a very troublesome means, and reality is simple and guessable keywords such as birthdays are reused (shared).Įven if you emphasize the benefits of “Password Manager” to such frivolous users, they don’t mind that it is “troublesome anyway”. Side-note : Bitwarden manages more then login credentials, it is a vault of its own, so I guess importing Bitwarden to Firefox would mean importing only the logins, which doesn’t seem to me a worthy operation.įirefox is my default browser but browsers, as people, myself included for those who’d doubt :=), are never perfect, should we agree on what defines perfection to start with. To connect to the article’s information, I have no intention of importing Bitwarden logins to Firefox I’d then consider as my default Password Manager. And I’m not even mentioning privacy issues evoked in the past concerning Firefox Password Manager (without and maybe even more with a Master password), issues for which I have no news if they’ve been corrected or not.

I just consider Bitwarden to be professional whilst Firefox Password Manager not at all. CumbersomeĢ- Bitwarden with its ‘Default URI Match Detection’ can narrow login credentials accordingly.ģ- Perhaps maybe because of (2) Firefox requires the user’s Master Password when it notices a site has a registered dedicated login : this happens to be a real bother when visiting a site for which we have a login but wish not to login to, i.e.

I switched from Firefox’s Password Manager to Bitwarden for a trivial reason : I disliked how the former operated :ġ- I want to enable/disable the Password Manager at any time : Bitwarden makes it easy, Firefox (given a Master Password is set of course) has no switch to disable the Master Password during a session unless to call ‘Clear Recent History’ with ctrl+shift+del and select ‘Active Logins’.
