![]() doesn’t help with credentials for things other than web-sites.using a remote service might provide undesirable info to the provider of that service, depending on the implementation (Mozilla’s “firefox sync” is currently ok, not sure about others).you are required to sign up for the sync service.Browsers have started to offer “password sync” so that the same passwords are both backed up and available from the same browser on other machines - but: However that only works when using that same browser on that same machine - and needs to be backed up. ![]() Most web browsers offer a password database, and provide nice integration with websites - autofilling login fields, saving passwords when we create new accounts somewhere, and updating the password database entries when we change passwords via HTML forms. ![]() However those passwords soon get difficult to keep track of - the best solution is to have some central database of passwords somewhere. The alternative is to manage multiple passwords, as reusing the same password in multiple places is a bad idea. And not all sites support such integration. However that provides a lot of undesirable information to your central credential provider. We all need to log on to multiple sites around the internet.įor a few people, “single sign on” with a well-known organisation works eg once you have a google login, many other sites offer “log in via google” option. In fact, as the hosted service is free for single-person use, and extremely cheap for even families, the primary reason to host it yourself is pure stubborn-ness and the open-source principle. If using it for a larger company, then the hosted service is strongly recommended my employer uses it and we’ve had good experiences. The self-hosting part of this article talks primarily about using bitwarden (or bitwarden-protocol-compliant equivalents) for a single person or small group. This feature was free in earlier versions of the Bitwarden open-source release, but no longer. A license is needed for this (self-hosted system still connects to for this feature). ![]() This article looks at the Bitwarden online password manager - why it is useful, and how to run it on your own server infrastructure as an alternative to using a hosted service.Īnd note that if you want to self-host a bitwarden server, the “organisations” feature doesn’t work ie you cannot share passwords with other users (family or team). The Bitwarden Password Manager - Host Your Own Server First published on: November 25, 2018 ![]()
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