Password Manager Make creating powerful passwords and remember them! Good password manager Strong passwords will be generated for you, stored in a secure library, and then logged you to the website without you doing anything. There are dozens of cloud-based password managers on the market, but in my tests, one always goes up to the top –Bitwarden.
Bitwarden is open source, secure, can work across platforms and provides an intuitive workflow that allows you to easily manage passwords on all devices. The free plan makes a good, basic but secure password manager, while Bitwarden’s Premium feature costs less than its competitors.
Open source advantages
The code running Bitwarden is open source. This means that anyone is free to check, attack, find flaws and report them. The more you look at the code, the more it becomes. None of the other major cloud-based password managers out there are open source. While this doesn’t make Bitwarden invincible, the company never violated it.
Like most password managers, Bitwarden uses AES-256 encryption to protect your data. Your password is not encrypted only on your own device. Bitwarden maintains a zero-knowledge system. All your username, password, URL, comments, and other vault data are end-to-end encrypted, meaning Bitwarden cannot see or access any of your data.
To further improve its security, Bitterton is Regular review of third parties Make sure it is safe. The most recent overall test started in 2023, when Treatment 53 Safety Company did it Source code review and penetration testing of core applications and libraries. The single platform app and web interface were also audited, all of which made me feel good about the security behind Bitwarden. It is also worth noting that if you know what you are doing, you can install Bitwarden’s backend code on your own server for self-hosting, if you like to run your own cloud.
Using Bitwarden
But if actually using applications and services is not a good experience, then all the security in the world is useless. Fortunately, Bitwarden’s workflows are mostly smooth workflows that integrate well with different platforms and take advantage of standardized security features such as Passkeys. You can even log in to Bitwarden using Passkey, which means you don’t even need to open the vault with a username or password.
There are applications for Android, iOS, Windows, MacOS and Linux, as well as extensions for all major web browsers. I use Bitwarden on every platform and in every browser. Yes, even opera. In early 2025, Bitwarden switched to native apps for Android and iOS. I never mind old apps, but in my tests this is definitely faster (at least on Android. The final iOS version isn’t out of beta yet).
Bitwarden has also recently modified its browser extension to give it a cleaner look and more customization options to tailor the user experience to fit your workflow. There is a new compact mode that saves some space and has light and dark themes to fit your PC theme.
Photo: Bitwarden