![]() LastPass has a better autofill interface and have better set of features. This is my personal opinion, Bitwarden is not better than LastPass. And being forced to think about an alternative or staying with them with a such short notice, sorry Lastpass but I can't trust you enough to pay for your services. ![]() To be honest the Lastpass's cli was great too but their GUI □. Last thing, because your user can be linked to any Org, you could use it at work too, being added to your company Org.Īnd truly last thing this time, their cli works well, with a very smart session mechanism. They mapped the Lastpass folders on the Bitwarden folders (or collections if your work inside an Org). But one thing I can say is that the import feature support the CSV Lastpass format and works pretty well ingesting your secrets. In term of autofill capability, I can't yet provide a feedback, I migrated just today. For just 10£ a year, I quite liked it.Īlso, the Lastpass GUI seems not very user-friendly, at least not as clear as the Bitwarden's one. You can associate a second user to that Org and then filter the collection of secrets being readable to him. Mainly because they're cheaper, opensource and can let you create an organization, it's included in their first paid personal plan (10£/year). Moving to a Bitwarden paid plan because I find their interface a bit sexier but that's the less important of it. Especially for those who don't see the value in a password manager. Or would you suggest BitWarden? I just want to set up the business so I don't need to worry about changing all the time and retraining people how to use the password manager. So I'm considering should we go for teams and then all their personal information gets included in their work accounts or paying for them to get a premium account for their personal passwords and a team account for the work passwords?īut if I do get them both a personal and a team account will that make it more difficult for people that aren't super tech-savvy to know which account to save their passwords to, and end up having a bunch of work passwords in their personal account and vice versa? We had been using the free version of LastPass for each team member. I run a small business with a team of 8 people. But why would anyone stay with, or start using, a product that advertises itself as free but doesn't function until you pay? Even the paid alternatives that offer free trials are more useful than LastPass now. While making something like password autofill paywalled would certainly cause some users to abandon ship, the product as a password manager would still function and would even encourage people who stayed to buy a premium subscription for ease of access. I can understand them taking certain QoL features, even something like password autofill, and putting it behind a paywall, but now they offer a "free" product which is completely unusable unless you pay up. Seriously, they've gone and taken one of the most basic features required for a password manager and paywalled it. They are basically saying that you either pay up, or you don't get to log into anything on your phone. They've basically gone and made their product unusable for 95% of their free users. ![]() ![]() I have no damn clue what LastPass is thinking.
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