Email or username:

Password:

Forgot your password?
Top-level
solo

@jzb tbh I hate services forcing 2fa on you when you don't need it, so I just store my 2fa codes in bitwarden. yes, it makes it not actually 2fa. no, I don't care.

6 comments
winter

@solonovamax @jzb It's still beneficial. There are a couple things i don't keep in Bitwarden but most of it i do. I guess i could separate them out but it seems so tough given how 2fa works.

solo

@winterayars @jzb yeah if it was smth where I really cared about the security I'd use actual 2fa

Oliver Jensen

@solonovamax @winterayars @jzb arguably it's still 2fa (assuming you 2fa into your pw manager)

The second factor is something you have: you're using the device from which you 2fa'd into your password manager.

solo

@ojensen @winterayars @jzb I'm not using 2fa for my password manager lol (tbh I prob should, but, inconvenient)

so it's not really 2fa

Oliver Jensen

@solonovamax @winterayars @jzb ok so I'm going to disagree *hard* with the idea of not 2fa'ing into your pw manager. For real, you should set that up right now.

It's not inconvenient, you do it like once every 30 days or something.

13reak

@solonovamax @jzb

It still helps against online attackers. They (hopefully) don't have access to your bitwarden.

I honestly trust my password manager more than my phone.

Go Up