Use the “passwords” feature to check if one of yours is compromised. If it shows up, never ever reuse those credentials. They’ll be baked into thousands of botnets etc. and be forevermore part of automated break-in attempts until one randomly succeeds.

  • Godort@lemmy.ca
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    6 hours ago

    I assure you, the rare security issues for password managers are far preferable to managing compromises every couple weeks.

    • Kyrgizion@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 hours ago

      I’ve only really been in one breach. This one is actually a breach of a “security firm” (incompetent idiots) who aggregated login data from the dark web themselves, essentially doing the blackhats’ work for them.

      This is also EXACTLY why requiring online interactions to be verified with government ID is a terrible idea. Hackers will similarly be able to gain all possible wanted data in a single location. It’s simply too tempting of a target not to shoot for.

      • JohnEdwa@sopuli.xyz
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        1 hour ago

        Lucky you, I’ve been in at least 21 confirmed breaches so far.
        Which I don’t really care about, as I’ve been using unique passwords and a manager for well over two decades now. 178 of them, currently. …half to websites that probably died a decade ago.

        • thenoirwolfess@lemmynsfw.com
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          42 minutes ago

          One of my breaches was just Google Chrome (back when I used it) logging me entering my password in a self-hosted local web app via https but with no cert… Google. My breach was Google.

      • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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        6 hours ago

        I currently have 110 unique user+password combos. I wouldn’t want to change all those even once, if I were breached and had used similar credentials everywhere.

        Bitwarden keeps them well managed, synced between devices, and allows me to check the whole database for matches/breaches via haveibeenpwned integration. Plus because I prefer to keep things in-house as much as possible, I even self-host the server with vaultwarden walled off behind my own vpn, instead of using the public servers. (this also means it’s free, instead of a paid service)

        • ryannathans@aussie.zone
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          5 hours ago

          For everyone else reading, bitwarden is an open source free password manager. The pro features are less password related and more about sharing access, file storage, and 2fa authenticator integration

          • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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            5 hours ago

            Fair point.

            The self-hosting part was mostly about total control over my own systems and less about the paid features. It’s very much not necessary.

            As far as pro features go, It was the TOTP authenticator integration that was kind of important to me. ~20% of my accounts have TOTP 2fa, and bitwardens clients will automatically copy the latest 2fa code into the clipboard when filling a password.

            Bitwarden will even tell you if a saved account could have 2fa (the service offers it), but it’s not setup/saved in bitwarden atm.

            • thenoirwolfess@lemmynsfw.com
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              45 minutes ago

              That’s fair. I use Aegis for OTP, but more frequently I get services pining at me to make a passkey, which Bitwarden also handles.