I'm really disappointed to see #bitwarden falling into the slop hole. Can anyone recommend a #passwordmanager , ideally #selfhosted , that doesn't use LLM slop in its core product, OR in its contributing commits?
#askfedi
@violet I use Gnome Secrets on desktop and KeepassDX on Android, and I use Nextcloud to sync them. I did a big comparison of password managers in the quoted post.


The Gnome Secrets developer recently said they do not use LLMs.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/World/secrets/-/issues?sort=created_date&state=closed&first_page_size=20&show=eyJpaWQiOiI2NTYiLCJmdWxsX3BhdGgiOiJXb3JsZC9zZWNyZXRzIiwiaWQiOjIzNjk2MH0%3D

Unfortunately, Nextcloud
does use AI, and I don't know of a way to sync password between Linux and Android that doesn't involve software using AI.

RE: https://transfem.social/notes/aa2w3yuz3tfz0hdp
@2something @violet
Gnome secrets looks nice. I like the browser extension keepassxc and others have, does it have something like that?

As for syncing I haven't checked for certain that it does not use AI, but syncthing and syncthing-fork on Android might be worth investigating.
@walnut @violet I tried setting up syncthing awhile ago and I was unsuccessful (even to sync between my desktop and laptop).

Gnome Secrets does not have an associated browser extension, unfortunately. I just copy passwords from the desktop app into my browser, which is a bit slower but not by too much.
@2something @violet
Shoot (to both statements).
The main reason I like the browser extension is domain matching, so I don't have to worry quite as much if it's a phishing site.