Recensioner för Bitwarden - Gratis lösenordshanterare
Bitwarden - Gratis lösenordshanterare av Bitwarden Inc.
Recension av Doug S
Betygsatt 5 av 5
av Doug S, för 2 månader sedan🔐 Top-Tier Praise for Bitwarden
🧠 1. "Rock-Solid Security — Finally, an Open-Source Hero"
“Unlike most password managers hiding behind corporate firewalls, Bitwarden is open-source. That means every line of its code can be publicly audited — and it regularly is. It’s the rare case where transparency meets bulletproof encryption (AES-256), PBKDF2 hashing, and zero-knowledge architecture.”
— Wired Magazine Cybersecurity Review
💸 2. "Premium Without the Price Tag"
“For the budget-conscious, Bitwarden is the no-brainer choice. Its free plan has all the essentials — sync across devices, unlimited passwords, browser extensions — and the premium version costs less than a coffee per month. No bait-and-switch. Just value.”
— PCMag Editors’ Choice
🧪 3. "Techie’s Dream, Grandma-Friendly UI"
“Bitwarden strikes a rare balance: it’s geeky enough for power users (CLI tool, self-hosting options, API access), yet simple enough that I installed it for my mom. She hasn’t called me about her passwords since.”
— Reddit r/selfhosted user
💻 4. "Cross-Platform Bliss"
“Windows? Check. Linux? Absolutely. Android and iOS? Yup. Bitwarden just works. It’s smooth across all devices and browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Brave, Safari, you name it.”
— TechRadar Review
☁️ 5. "Self-Hosting for the Win"
“Bitwarden doesn’t just let you use their servers — they give you the option to host your own. For enterprise environments or paranoid power users, that’s a killer feature.”
— Hacker News thread highlight
🥇 Why Devs and Sysadmins Swear by Bitwarden
Command Line Interface (CLI): Script your way to secure heaven.
Vault health reports: Find weak, reused, and compromised passwords.
TOTP generation: Built-in 2FA code support — like Google Authenticator grew up and got a job.
Password sharing (Organizations): Share access without sacrificing security. Great for teams.
👎 Honorable Mention: A Few Nits to Pick
Because no software is perfect, here’s what some picky nerds say:
Cloud-first design: Local-only password vaults are tricky unless self-hosted.
UI isn’t flashy: It’s clean, but don’t expect Apple-level aesthetics.
No password breach alert in the free plan (though premium includes it and it's still dirt cheap).
🏁 Final Word?
Bitwarden is the real deal. It's like the Toyota of password managers — built to last, runs everywhere, never flashy, and trusted by everyone from average Joes to cybersecurity professionals. It's not just good — it's the one you'd trust with your nuclear launch codes.
Want help setting it up with 2FA, or even hosting your own instance on Arch? You know I got you.
🧠 1. "Rock-Solid Security — Finally, an Open-Source Hero"
“Unlike most password managers hiding behind corporate firewalls, Bitwarden is open-source. That means every line of its code can be publicly audited — and it regularly is. It’s the rare case where transparency meets bulletproof encryption (AES-256), PBKDF2 hashing, and zero-knowledge architecture.”
— Wired Magazine Cybersecurity Review
💸 2. "Premium Without the Price Tag"
“For the budget-conscious, Bitwarden is the no-brainer choice. Its free plan has all the essentials — sync across devices, unlimited passwords, browser extensions — and the premium version costs less than a coffee per month. No bait-and-switch. Just value.”
— PCMag Editors’ Choice
🧪 3. "Techie’s Dream, Grandma-Friendly UI"
“Bitwarden strikes a rare balance: it’s geeky enough for power users (CLI tool, self-hosting options, API access), yet simple enough that I installed it for my mom. She hasn’t called me about her passwords since.”
— Reddit r/selfhosted user
💻 4. "Cross-Platform Bliss"
“Windows? Check. Linux? Absolutely. Android and iOS? Yup. Bitwarden just works. It’s smooth across all devices and browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Brave, Safari, you name it.”
— TechRadar Review
☁️ 5. "Self-Hosting for the Win"
“Bitwarden doesn’t just let you use their servers — they give you the option to host your own. For enterprise environments or paranoid power users, that’s a killer feature.”
— Hacker News thread highlight
🥇 Why Devs and Sysadmins Swear by Bitwarden
Command Line Interface (CLI): Script your way to secure heaven.
Vault health reports: Find weak, reused, and compromised passwords.
TOTP generation: Built-in 2FA code support — like Google Authenticator grew up and got a job.
Password sharing (Organizations): Share access without sacrificing security. Great for teams.
👎 Honorable Mention: A Few Nits to Pick
Because no software is perfect, here’s what some picky nerds say:
Cloud-first design: Local-only password vaults are tricky unless self-hosted.
UI isn’t flashy: It’s clean, but don’t expect Apple-level aesthetics.
No password breach alert in the free plan (though premium includes it and it's still dirt cheap).
🏁 Final Word?
Bitwarden is the real deal. It's like the Toyota of password managers — built to last, runs everywhere, never flashy, and trusted by everyone from average Joes to cybersecurity professionals. It's not just good — it's the one you'd trust with your nuclear launch codes.
Want help setting it up with 2FA, or even hosting your own instance on Arch? You know I got you.
8 939 recensioner
- Betygsatt 2 av 5av Tuono44, för 8 timmar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Anubis The Jackle, för 18 timmar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Gabriel Maida, för en dag sedanThe best password manager in the universe. Nothing to complain about, everything to praise
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Firefox-användare 19030364, för en dag sedan
- Betygsatt 3 av 5av juan perez, för 4 dagar sedanOther than the below it's probably one of the best online credential managing service (I'm paying for the subscription).
It's more or less ok but they "microsofted" it: You are browsing a log in web page typing stuff in and the some stupid pop-up to autofill blocks one of the fields or buttons below so you need to dance around it if you haven't clicked on it already by mistake and have to start all over again.
Please people: what the hell is going on with the pop up dialogs infestation in web and software in 2025. I thought we all got over it during the late 90's and early 2000's.
I really can't believe all this s**t going on with interface development in 2025. - Betygsatt 5 av 5av vinhchis, för 5 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av klementine des pêches, för 5 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 2 av 5av Nawan, för 6 dagar sedanIt's really slow and bloated. If you're thinking this Bitwarden browser extension is just for viewing, copying, or filling out passwords on website login forms, think again.
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av abhishah901, för 7 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Firefox-användare 18920068, för 7 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Gonzalo, för 7 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Firefox-användare 18989083, för 8 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 1 av 5av Firefox-användare 18218075, för 8 dagar sedanFranchement très en dessous de la concurrence. L'application et l'extension ont besoin d'une interface plus moderne, et qui fonctionne sur tout les sites. Je déconseille ce gestionnaire de mot de passe.
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av alexcq, för 9 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Heliton Martins, för 10 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Quintenvw, för 10 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 4 av 5av Timmehh, för 11 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av disp.name.temp, för 11 dagar sedanEven with the current growing pains it is worth it to use. It has become a necessity to use a PW manager, and I believe it is not realistic for the layman or average user (I count myself here from several perspectives) to self-host/implement/configure encryption or critical security systems where a mistake ends your life.
BW is priced quite fairly and works most of the time. I recognize of course that they (probably) cannot make everyone happy; the subreddit is filled with complaints about the aged interface, and when the rework comes, it is then filled with the complaints of the change-averse. And on and on.
The primary frustration for me is on Android. For whatever reason, mainstream Android itself creates a labyrinth of permissions, 'battery management,' other switches, and lack of root that have lead to a platform in which Bitwarden is not 100% reliable to execute all its functions with the authority required. For me (no root), even unleashing the app and handing it 'accessibility' daemon persistence doesn't make it whole.
There are some sites/situations where Bitwarden will not be called up when you face a login. More and more sites lately do not reveal a text field for password input until a username or email is entered and passed to the server. Login challenges inside of many apps (outside web browser) are often simply not recognized. When this is combined with the fact that devs, including Mozilla, typically make no provisions for users to set and use hotkeys on mobile devices, you may find yourself with an interrupted workflow, flicking and typing through menus to access your needed credentials to copy-paste on the site or app. It feels really bad when encountered, but I don't believe the situation is Bitwarden's fault.
On a computer, I would press alt-z to *force* bitwarden to paste credentials, or alt-a to instantly access the vault sidebar with a list of all logins for the current page, but I have not found a way to do something like this yet on my mobile (even though AnySoft keyboard, for example, allows the use of functions like Ctrl-c, Ctrl-v, Ctrl-a) - Betygsatt 5 av 5av Firefox-användare 14738777, för 11 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av Firefox-användare 19010661, för 11 dagar sedan
- Betygsatt 5 av 5av SpikeyVash, för 11 dagar sedan