I use LastPass and have found it works well. Sharing passwords has a few issues (not very intuitive), but for the most part works. 

I keep KeePass2 synchronized with Dropbox, but I use a long login password with a key file, which is only on the local machine (Linux, Windows, Android). Haven't had any buggy issues in the past 5 years.

I also keep a plain text file on my local machine as a back up in case the above two fail.

Mark

On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 7:16 PM, Michael Butash <michael@butash.net> wrote:
I tried to use keepass for a while, but it was buggy, particularly the mono vermin.  I learned what mono was, and why to hate it.  If you have more than one monitor, you learn it's utterly stupid when it comes to screen/context awareness in linux.

I used keepassx, for a while it was good.  I had issues nfs mounting and sharing the file, which I took to synchronizing a file as the only sane approach, but I began to treat everything as a revision, which in itself was problematic.  After a while too many updates across disparate systems became too much.

Then I went for lastpass years ago, but since citrix bought them, I have issues with them as a company and their security.  They suck as a company, another "too big to fail" imho, and I anger the fact they bought the company I like.  I feel I need to divest.

I'm interested in a something that can be multi-master authoritative for passwords, cloud-based makes sense as a travel, but otherwise presents challenges for security, who is really authoritative, and other.  

I lean toward standing up a cloud service, or at least storage to do it.  Something NOT commercial utterly goddamn preferable.

-mb

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