• MrFunkEdude@piefed.social
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    26 days ago

    Cool.

    I just started using Bitwarden almost a year now. I don’t know how I lived without it before? It’s nice to know I wont have to switch to something else.

  • inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    I’m nerdy enough to use bitwarden but not nerdy enough to truly understand this.

    Can someone explain it like I’m 5?

    • CriticalMiss@lemmy.world
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      25 days ago

      Sure. The majority of the BitWarden client is licensed under the GPL, which categorizes it as “free software”. However, one of the dependencies titled “BitWarden-SDK” was licensed under a different proprietary license which didn’t allow re-distribution of the SDK. For the most part, this was never a problem as FOSS package maintainers didn’t include the dependency (as it was optional) and were able to compile the various clients and keep the freedoms granted by the GPL license. However, a recent change made BitWarden-SDK a required dependency, which violated freedom 0 (the freedom to distribute the code as you please). BitWarden CTO came out and said this was an error and fixed this, making BitWarden SDK an optional dependency once again which now makes BitWarden free software again. For the average joe, this wouldn’t have mattered as BitWarden SDK contains features that are usually favored by businesses and the average Joe can live without. So everything now returns back to normal, hopefully.

      • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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        25 days ago

        This seems like classic corporate backtracking when their customers spot a terrible, deliberate decision.

        That being said, I am happy about it. I got my company to use it and finally got my girlfriend to use it and just recommended it to her brother. Would hate to have to try to find something else

        • douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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          24 days ago

          This seems like classic corporate backtracking when their customers spot a terrible, deliberate decision.

          I didn’t think that’s the case here

          However, would you rather that the feedback of users NOT change behavior? I’m not entirely sure what your end game is here, you WANT corporations to ignore and not take action on feedback?

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            24 days ago

            Why do they have to “WANT” that? Ignoring the fact that they literally said they were happy it was changed back, why does that matter to the criticism? If it’s true, it’s true, and the fact that corporations are the ones in a position to habitually make terrible decisions about FOSS is a big problem. It’s valid to point out that it would be good to find a better way.

            If anything it sounds like you “WANT” to ignore it.

        • CriticalMiss@lemmy.world
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          24 days ago

          I don’t think so, to be honest. The bitwarden-sdk had been there for a VERY long time and you could always compile without it. Not being able to build a FOSS client wouldn’t hurt bitwarden’s bottom line too much. Most people use whatever is provided in the app stores (which is compiled with the source available sdk).

  • 486@lemmy.world
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    25 days ago

    I was really sceptical of the CTOs first response, but this does actually seem to be genuinely good news.

  • Jeena@piefed.jeena.net
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    26 days ago

    If that wasn’t on purpose than that was a big fuckup. I was sometimes thinking about testing Bitwarden but with this volatile license situation I’m not interested anymore.

    • dustyData@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      That’s a poor understanding of the situation. Nothing in the licensing changed. The SDK has always been the proprietary business to business secrets management product. The client integrates with and can use that SDK to provide the paid service to businesses. The client and the server side management of password has always been and still is FOSS.

      This was apparently an accidental change in the build code (not the client code, just the building scripts) that required the inclusion of the SDK to build the client when actually it has never and doesn’t really need any of that code. It prevented building the client without accepting the SDK license. Which it shouldn’t.

      This was fixed and some things will be put in place so it doesn’t happen again. Nothing in the licensing scheme changed, at all. This is not a catastrophic enshittification event. A Dev was just being lazy and forgot to check the dependencies on the build chain before their commit.

      • Telorand@reddthat.com
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        26 days ago

        Thank you for bringing some sanity. I get that people experience capitalist enshittification on a regular basis, but sometimes people make honest mistakes.

          • Telorand@reddthat.com
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            26 days ago

            Okay, I actually laughed at that one! I guess us QA folks can just pack up and go home 😆

            • shrodes@lemmy.world
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              25 days ago

              If it looks like a developer made a mistake, it was actually the product owner. Or the user. Or cosmic rays. But never the developer.

        • DrDystopia@lemy.lol
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          26 days ago

          Idiots downvoting amazes you? Then there’s a whole world of amazement awaiting you!

    • Telorand@reddthat.com
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      26 days ago

      You can do what you like, but the change is sane, and they’ve now separated their Secrets Manager, which is their proprietary software for businesses, from their primary client, which is GPL.

      IMO, the internet is doing that thing again where they invent villains.

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      26 days ago

      “I only read the headline and the comments from the threads a week ago, I am truly disappointed in Bitwarden’s stance against FOSS as I’ve misunderstood it.”

  • net00@lemm.ee
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    26 days ago

    Why would anyone trust any company with their passwords??

    Just use keepass and not bother with BS

    • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      Because most people need a cloud solution for synchronization across devices. Unless you’re spinning up your own service like Nextcloud or similar for this, relying on a commercial cloud storage service for storing the file is just as dangerous (perhaps more so, as your attack surface is now across two third party services) as relying on someone like Bitwarden or Lastpass.

      • net00@lemm.ee
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        26 days ago

        There’s a big difference. You trust entities like bitwarden/lastpass/etc to properly encrypt the data, protect your master key, and trust their entire architecture behind the scenes.

        When you encrypt the keepass DB that’s all done by you locally with a open source client. No one knows your master key, and you get a simple encrypted file. You can hand that file to hackers if you want, will be useless without the key.

        I put one of the copies of my keepass on onedrive, and syncs perfectly across all devices.

        Companies can enshiffity at a moments notice.

        • Dark ArcA
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          26 days ago

          I do not trust bitwarden to encrypt my data anymore than anyone trusts keypass to encrypt my data.

          They’re both open source and they both do the encryption locally; you’re plainly mistaken.

        • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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          25 days ago

          Except for the part that it’s not a question of trust (being open source), there’s no third-party architecture to trust (it can and should be self-hosted), the data on the server are also encrypted client-side before leaving your device, sure.

          Oh, and you also get proper sync, no risk of desync if two devices gets a change while offline without having to go check your in-house sync solution, easy share between user (still with no trust needed in the server), all working perfectly with good user UI integration for almost every systems.

          Yeah, I wonder why people bother using that, instead of deploying clunky, single-user solution.

    • CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      Bitwarden can be fully self hosted, I’m doing it. My Bitwarden server doesn’t (and can’t) talk to them at all as it has no way to access the internet. They know nothing about my deployment except that I signed up for a free license key.

    • mac@lemm.ee
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      26 days ago

      I used to use Keepass and sync thing and would consistently run into conflicts between my desktop and mobile entries. Maybe there’s a better way to do it that I’m missing, but that was very annoying

      • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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        25 days ago

        I use this setup for my personal passwords, using nextcloud as the sync solution. A semi-fix for that was using Keepass2Android (on Android obviously). It integrates with nextcloud directly, keep a local DB of passwords, and would only load the remote one (and merge) on unlock and updates, not keeping it “constantly” sync on every remote change. It works well… most of the time… with only two devices that almost always have connection to the server… and for only one user.

        It’s overly clunky though. It’s the big advantage of “service based” password manager against “single file based” ones. They handle sync. We have plans to move to bitwarden at my workplace, and since the client supports multiple accounts on multiple servers, I’ll probably move to that for personal stuff too. The convenience is just there, without downside.