

In addition, they have support for Two-factor authentication either using an App such as Authy or Microsoft Authenticator, and they also support something which I’d highly recommend everybody uses along with any password manager, and that’s a Yubikey. It’s something that’s not known to 1Password and isn’t stored by 1Password. So, in addition to your username and master password, when you sign up for their service, the device you are using generates a Secret Key. In terms of security, 1Password has a unique and strong approach as standard with their use of a Secret Key to protect your password vault. So to kick things off, let’s take a look at last year's Winner 1Password.

More information on my ethics statement can be found here: But this post is not sponsored by any of the password managers, the video however IS sponsored by AVG - more on them a bit later, and as always, my opinions are my own, so I am free to say what I want. It seems my previous years' videos have gotten their attention. Most, if not all of these, offer some form of affiliated discount, so if you wanted to sign up for any of these services, there’ll be some links to some discounts down below.įull Disclosure - Over the last year, I have worked with and been paid by most of the Password vendors to make sponsored content for them on my YouTube channel. This year we will be scoring 1Password, Keeper, Bitwarden, Synology C2, Dashlane, and LastPass, though you can probably guess my opinion on that last one!Īnd we’ll be scoring them on Security, Features, Support, any major frustrations, and of course, Pricing. Welcome back to the fourth Annual edition of the Best Password Manager.Įach year I review and discuss the best Password Managers, and if the recent LastPass breach has taught us anything - it’s that finding a better and more secure password manager is worth spending some time on.
