Proton just launched a new password manager, and it looks to be pretty feature-rich and quite polished. It's great seeing another password manager option from a trusted organization!
It's not likely to pull me away from Bitwarden (and I did just migrate away from Proton's services two weeks ago), but options are good.
@john_b
I also like to diversify my security products. Even though I love bitwarden, I still like having my MFA tokens generated by a separate app (Aegis).
Putting your eggs in one basket means you are putting all your trust in that basket to keep you safe.
downside though absence of a nice web interface, such as what you have for Proton Mail, Proton Drive you have to either install an app or browser extension to use it
@voltronic Sneaky - I like it!
My approach is to set up catch-all forwarding on a couple of my spare domains via Cloudflare. I can process those with Email Workers in CF if needed, or otherwise just forward them to my Fastmail inbox (with a special label). This way I can easily create a unique email address for every login - though of course I miss out on being able to reply from any of those "aliased" addresses.
personally i don't bother with email aliases
gmail, protonmail, tutanota are my three i use
used aliases in past though these days i don't sign up for as much stuff or register for new platforms as much as i used to
always handy to hear new methods/tips though 👍
@ecksmc
Since you mentioned email aliases, I should endorse SimpleLogin. Bitwarden bought them not long ago, and this is where it gets cool. You're only supposed to have a small number of email aliases allowed for the free SimpleLogin account. But I've found a way around that.
Log into both services and generate an API key in SimpleLogin. Now in Bitwarden, you add a new account and generate a new Username for an account. Under Service, specify SimpleLogin and plug in the API key.
@john_b