Bitwarden - The unofficial Bitwarden community

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Bitwarden - Open source password manager

Bitwarden is an open source password management platform for individuals, teams, and business organizations.

founded 4 years ago
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submitted 4 years ago* (last edited 4 years ago) by the_tech_beast@lemmy.ml to c/bitwarden@lemmy.ml
 
 

A few weeks ago, a question popped up in Reddit: “Is the longest possible password always better?”.

Some say size matters when it comes to password strength. The longer a password is, the harder it is to crack using brute force algorithms. However, password length is only one factor contributing to password security. More Ways to Harden Password Security

Hardening password security also involves using strong, unique passwords. One way to create a strong password is by using several characters. The more characters used, the harder a password is to crack.

The four character sets are:

Numerical characters such as 12345
Lowercase characters such as abcde
Uppercase characters such as ABCDE
Special characters such as !$%&?

A password consisting exclusively of numerical characters has only ten possible options for each character (0 – 9). If a password is six numerical characters in length, a hacker can attempt one million possible combinations (10 x 10 x 10 x 10 x 10 x 10).

However, a six-character password consisting of numbers and lowercase letters has thirty-six options for each character (0 – 9 plus a – z). Now, rather than one million possible combinations, 2,176,782,336 possible combinations exist for a six-character password. Randomness Helps Secure Passwords

A password’s overall randomness also contributes to better password security, and passphrases are an easy way to achieve that. Using a passphrase helps as it combines memorable words or phrases known to the user but less recognizable by hackers.

Another way to strengthen passwords is to avoid commonly-used dictionary words or repeated or sequential characters, such as “secret”. Likewise, some very long passwords appear in password dumps with remarkable frequency.

One such password is 1qaz2wsx3edc4rfv5tgb6yhn7ujm8ik,9ol.0p;/, which, despite being thirty-four characters in length, would be among the first couple of thousand attempts by a brute force hacker (you will see why if you look at your keyboard).

Lots of math can come into play, but longer and more unique characters create better passwords. You can easily build better passwords by using the Bitwarden Password Generator or try theoretical passwords or test existing credentials with the Password Strength Testing Tool. Bitwarden provides these features for free, including the Password Generator within all Bitwarden Clients, plus an option for password vault health reports in the premium and business plans. Other Password Best Practices

Brute force attacks are not the only reason for account hacking. Successful phishing attacks are a common cause of data breaches, and the easier it is to remember a password, the easier it is to disclose it to an unauthorized party. Further exacerbating this threat is if the same password is used for multiple accounts to save someone from remembering various log-in credentials. A recent report further supports this issue showing that nearly 9 out of 10 users reuse passwords.

A password manager helps generate and store unique and complex passwords for each account. The benefit of storing passwords in a password manager is that they are encrypted, hashed, and salted to prevent authorized access – which is a far safer option than storing passwords in plain text format in Word documents or Excel spreadsheets!

If you’d like to start generating secure passwords today you can sign up for an account, or launch a free trial for a Teams or Enterprise Organization.

Try Bitwarden today!

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FOR REPLAY - Fast forward to 10:15 past the music


Join us for a new introduction or a refresher on password management and Bitwarden basics!

The importance of password security

Getting started with a password manager

Top Bitwarden features

Optimizing your Personal Vault

Understanding Personal and Organizational Vaults

Bitwarden sharing basics

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Just wanted to know which hardware key you use

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Original Post - https://libredd.it/r/Bitwarden/comments/ms38ob/psa_bitwarden_vault_attacks/

I have seen at least three posts this week involving Bitwarden accounts.

Folks,

Do not reuse passwords...EVER.
ESPECIALLY do not reuse an existing password for your master password.
Consider creating a NEW email account for your important correspondence (banks, utilities, credit cards). Use this email for your Bitwarden account. Go ahead and use existing email for Facebook, personal correspondence, and websites that might share your information.
Pick a strong password for your master password. I use the Bitwarden passphrase generator with three words, a numeral, and punctuation, which yields over 40 bits of entropy.
Set up 2FA for both your new secure email and the Bitwarden account.
Secure your master password and 2FA recovery data externally. It could be a slip of paper with your vehicle title, birth certificate, and will. Backups are important!
Sign up at haveibeenpwned.com.
Use the online tools at Bitwarden.com to review and change exposed or reused passwords.

Bad actors have seized on the expanded popularity of Bitwarden and are attacking vaults with credentials from existing dumps of email/password pairs.

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