Organizations (Bitwarden’s version of vaults) come with their own sets of problems (can’t transfer passwords between vaults unless it’s between your personal and an org). There’s more emphasis on using the note field instead of having a bunch of custom fields The different apps (desktop, browser, mobile, web) don’t always play nice together My review is also based off of self-hosting, which gives you all of the premium features for free. I came from 1Password, which is more similar to Enpass than it is to bitwarden. After reading the above report, I just can't get myself to pull the trigger yet.Ĭompare this to frequent and complete audits for Bitwarden ( ) or 1Password ( ), both of which consistently performed much better than Enpass' single audit. Its also concerning that Enpass has been so hesitant to get the iOS or OSX apps audited, or to get a more recent audit.Īnd view the pushing that community members had to apply just to get that partial audit: Įnpass has all the features and integrations I would want in a password manager. The route a password takes from storage to its destination is a huge vulerability, and one where some glaring issues were found with how enpass handles it. While yes, password storage is on the device or cloud of your choosing, that is only part of the security risks that need to be addressed when managing passwords. The only reason I keep giving self-hosted Bitwarden a chance over and over again is because of Enpass' very poor (and only) 3rd party audit, which only covered its API, Windows, and Android apps. Is there anything else that I'm missing that could make me switch? I don't want to hate on BW, it's a great program, but I have not seen a reason for me to switch. The only thing I found in Bitwarden that's better than in Enpass is the URL-matching, in BW you can do it on a per-entry base and in Enpass you have to do it for every URL or not at all. I sync it with my own server via Webdav so the data is in my hands. Yes, it's closed source but the vault is not connected to their servers and can be synced with your method of choice. You can sort by entries with 2FA, attachments, archived etc. I use it on 2 Windows Pcs, 1 Android phone and an iPad.The browser extension is just a link to the Windows app, in my opinion a better integration than for BW. I have a lifetime license for Enpass and have been using it for years and never had any issues. Editing of entries takes more steps and you have to manually sync everytime as the auto-sync takes long to kick in. On Android it does not save new passwords (does not work on Enpass either) and auto-fill is hit or miss. You have to press enter everytime manually, on Enpass this happens automatically on pc. Although pretty good on iOS devices, the autofill experience with shortcuts on Android and Pc is kinda meh. The windows app and browser extension are pretty weak, everything "pro" you want to do, you have to do in the browser which can always be only as responsive as the server the instance is running on. I installed Bitwarden as a self-host on my server but I just can't get to like it. Everybody here keeps talking about Lastpass, Dashlane, Keepass etc but I see no mention of Enpass
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