


After that, the association is stored, so logging in the next time will be even easier.
SWITCH FROM LASTPASS TO BITWARDEN PASSWORD
And in the case when it doesn't associate a password from a site with its corresponding app, you can search directly from the prompt and assign the password to the site right there-it takes just a few taps. For starters, there hasn't been a single time that it hasn't offered a prompt on a password box. And there isn't a way to search directly from the autofill prompt.Īgain, 1Password fixes all of those issues. Concerned about using LastPass after its data breach Leo Laporte demonstrates on Ask The Tech Guys how you can move your passwords from LastPass to another. So I am asking for a few in depth answers on why I should switch to Bitwarden. But just because it looks nice does not mean it isnt malicious or just plain bad. I have also been using Lastpass premium for about 2 years now with my Yubikey, and I have loved it. The reason why you don't want to do this is because encryption is a result of tons of research, reinventing the wheel means you are creating a possibly weaker version. From my understanding everything is encrypted. And others, it prompts but says there are no saved passwords for that app/site. Another issue is that LastPass appears to be using its own version of AES, the same security expert that reported this indicated that Bitwarden appears to not have this issue. I'm not sure what the determining factor is here, but sometimes the autofill feature works fine on LastPass.
SWITCH FROM LASTPASS TO BITWARDEN ANDROID
One of my biggest peeves with LastPass is how utterly unreliable the Android app's autofill option has been-even after Google implemented the autofill API, which I hoped would solve these issues. (If you use LastPass and don't want to switch, please enable this feature Account Options > Extensions Preferences > Log Out after this many minutes of inactivity.) If you visit a site youve saved credentials for, Bitwardens browser icon shows the number of saved. Both 1Password and LastPass lock the vault after a period of inactivity on mobile, but the same doesn't apply to browser extensions. I like Bitwardens semiautomated password fill-in tool. You know what else 1Password does that LastPass doesn't? Auto-lock the vault in the Chrome extension by default. That's a big level up on security for all your passwords. This key is also stored on your trusted devices, so it's easy to keep secure but hard to lose. The key is automatically generated and shared with you in a document when you sign up for 1Password. This is a highly complex key that is required every time you log in on a new device (note: only on the first log in-after the device is confirmed, you can log in with just your username and password). First of all, it doesn't just force 2FA out of the box, but it sets a "secret key" when you create your account.
