• ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Syncthing is encrypted transfers.

        The database is encrypted.

        And you can set it to not use relays for data, only matchmaking between your own devices.

        So it’s an encrypted file, encrypted again, and sent directly from an IP you own to an IP you own.

      • GHiLA@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        Consider the possibility that someone could get your database.

        It isn’t a safe. You can’t weld through the side of it and get in. You either make it ridiculous or impossible to get in.

        Use something memorable, but insane.

        My password is a three-line film quote with numbers in some of the places for letters.

        Haikus work great. Memorable, complex. Wrote it yourself? Even better.

    • Routhinator@startrek.website
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      4 days ago

      I’ve always loved Keepass, however I moved away from it in 2012 as it and any file based vault has brute forcing issues. You need to track every copy of it that has been made and if any copy falls out of your hands, like if you lose a device, you need to do a password rotation on 100% of your passwords. Since its a file, its not possible to prevent brute forcing.

      • ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        An online database is still a file ultimately. A SQL or other DB file stored in a webserver, accessed through a web interface.

        Vaultwarden, etc, are the same, only the database file is less directly visible IMO. Keepass IMO is simple. The DB in a bespoke format, stored outside the application.

        You could put the vault in system32 and name it “trustedinstaller.log”, and if someone saw you had keepass they wouldn’t even know where your vault is.

        Given the number of well documented breaches of online password vaults, I would much rather do a private device to device sync via syncthing and keep it out of webservers.