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1 yr. ago

  • oh yeah sorry meant less than a euro

  • Now that you mention it, does seem a bit like Louis as well lol

  • Bitwarden is an online password manager and no I don't consider self hosting it offline.

  • Passkeys are only good if they aren't in a online password manager. They are better than TOTP 2FA in terms of security and phishing resistance. I see 2FA as a last resort when someone even gets into my password manager. Storing passkeys completely makes this useless, as I'm sure anyone that can log into my accounts would've done so by getting a hold of my unencrypted password manager database. Unless android provides a real offline way of storing passkeys in the device, I am not interested alot.

  • That guy looks like Mark Zuckerberg

  • Bitwarden. The UI is about to be updated to something more modern so that's no longer is an issue for most people. It's also open source, so yes.

    The 10€ per year as the premium subscription is just unbeatable. You pay less than a euro per month for a reliable and robust password manager. And you don't even need the premium subscription, because almost everything is free. I honestly consider it a donation rather than a subscription.

  • Justifying url injections for money? Ads are one thing, but anyone that knew that their browser was "secretly" injecting stuff into the url would be creeped the hell out. I don't see how this browser is private at all.

  • The answer is in the title. Thank you.

  • yogurt

    Jump
  • Another distro?!?!

  • Did I ever talk about Mozilla? Who said Mozilla or stock Firefox was good? They're ass. Mozilla is ass and stock firefox is worse than stock chrome. I wouldn't use Librewolf if it wasn't for the monopoly and ublock origin support. Not because Librewolf is bad but because I know that Firefox's security sucks and Gecko is slow indeed, but now not even privacy focused chromium browsers are an option because of manifest v3, great. At this point, I am hoping for Ladybird to be something to look forward to, because even the alternative to chromium is shit.

    Brave is not any better. It should be obvious for anyone enough to understand how shady brave devs are, when they:

  • If you look up what they have done in the past, you'll know.

  • Oh yes, I immediately remembered portal after reading this, lol.

  • The CVE-2024-9680 vulnerability is described as a “use-after-free” flaw, which occurs when a program tries to access memory that has already been released or freed. Memory corruption bugs like this are often used to attack browsers, potentially giving attackers control over the service or further access to the system.

    R.. ru. Rst... rust