Old school.
Pen, paper and locked fireproof case.
In the digital age, protecting your personal information might seem like an impossible task. We’re here to help.
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Old school.
Pen, paper and locked fireproof case.
Been using Keeper. I would run a self-hosted Bitwarden instance but I travel a ton and don't trust AWS / GCP with my data (would put it on a Raspberry Pi I have lying around). If I didn't travel, I would 100% have self-hosted it for the added security and peace of mind.
So far, I've had a great experience with Keeper. It hasn't had a breach in a hot minute, and it auto fills on all my devices perfectly regardless of OS. Very happy so far, but will probably move as soon as I stop travelling quite as much.
Ima big fan of Mooltipass the hardware password manager.
https://www.tindie.com/products/stephanelec/mooltipass-mini-ble-authenticator/
What I use is just password manager. It's offline and it only backs up to your phone or SD card. I ended up getting the paid version so I could store more than 12. I never looked for another one because this one does exactly what I want and ir seems solid privacy wise.
I use keepassx and cloud storage to move it between computers like a caveman.
Regular Bitwarden because I'm too chickenshit to self-host my password manager (like, if my NAS goes down or is unreachable, I'm screwed).
I was a longtime Keepass user before that, and may go back to it because I love the idea of a password + key file.
I'm using gnome-passwordsafe (gtk keepass) both on Arch desktop and postmarketOS phone with Gnome-mobile
Nextcloud for sync
Personally, bitwarden because of the browser addon, and then KeepassXC to store the 2FA recovery codes