Lately I’ve been increasingly worried about corrupted payloads of even open source password managers. Password managers are among the world’s biggest honeypots. Maybe you trust the coders of the password manager. Maybe it’s Open Source. But do you trust all of its upstream dependencies? And all their CI build processes? And each of their developers’ security?

That’s part of why I won’t use an Electron-based password manager like BitWarden: there’s no Electron app with a minimal dependency graph. Even Electron itself could easily fall victim if someone important in the development pipeline is compromised… And besides, Electron sucks anyway.

So, one way I can mitigate against the possibility of a malicious payload being delivered on password manager update is to not put all my eggs in one basket. For example, where I can, I authenticate with a Yubikey (if only by TOTP on Yubico Authenticator). Then my password isn’t enough. But where do I store the recovery codes? Ugh: in the password manager.

I’ve been thinking on this for a while, and I haven’t really found a perfect solution that provides me a way to store secrets without also being too reliant on one party’s software. If I rely heavily on the password manager, that puts too much trust in it. If I rely more on a hardware token, that’s too risky in case of loss of theft.

What’s a security-aware nerd to do?

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments
0 points

Use KeePassXC. Only place passwords that will be needed on a device. Don’t upload to a server that you do not own.

permalink
report
reply
0 points

What do you do for backups?

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

3-2-1

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points

I think if you’re using Keepass/Strongbox, and using e2e iCloud encryption, that’s good enough for most users.

Just have a backup somewhere.

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points

No no no, not Keepass, Strongbox, or iCloud. That isn’t trustworthy.

KeePassXC.

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points

Why?

permalink
report
parent
reply

Technology

!tech@partizle.com

Create post

Computers, phones, AI, whatever

Community stats

  • 1

    Monthly active users

  • 65

    Posts

  • 95

    Comments