

I use an event in my life which I will never forget. If you forget it you are in deep doo doo. csv file and then saved that to a separate drive, and also printed it and I store that in a safe.īitWarden WILL NOT have access to my data. When I had finished, I used BitWarden to Save a. But once done, I am now secure as can be for the foreseeable future.

I made sure that every password is a minimum of 16 characters long containing upper and lower case numerals and symbols etc etc So I then set about the laborious task of changing and updating every password I have. I was more than surprised to learn that a significant number had been exposed. I exhaustively went through every password I have (there are a lot !!) and used the Vault to access and open every password and the used the "check if password has been exposed" feature to check every single password. I think I would be safe in saying that BitWarden would be the most trusted password manager in use today. I'm using bitwarden Firefox extension on my desktop, then the bitwarden app on my iPhone.
