KeePass Password Safe is a free, open source, lightweight, and easy-to-use password manager for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X, with ports for Android, iPhone/iPad and other mobile devices. With so many passwords to remember and the need to vary passwords to protect your valuable data, it’s nice to have KeePass to manage your passwords in a secure way. KeePass puts all your passwords in a highly encrypted database and locks them with one master key or a key file. As a result, you only have to remember one single master password or select the key file to unlock the whole database. And the databases are encrypted using the best and most secure encryption algorithms currently known, AES and Twofish. See our features page for details.
Features
- Strong security (AES encryption, SHA-256 hash, protection against dictionary and guessing attacks, in-memory protection, ...).
- Portable (no installation required), available for many platforms (Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, smart devices/phones, ...).
- Efficient and flexible organization (entry groups, tags, time fields, file attachments, ...).
- Various data transfer methods (clipboard, drag and drop, auto-type, plugins can provide integration with other applications, ...).
- Powerful password generator (generation based on character sets and patterns, with many options).
- Extensible (plugin architecture) and multi-language (more than 40 languages are available).
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I have used this software for years and it has never failed me
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I have been using this product ages (cant remember how much but for sure more than 10 years) it works like a dream - my passwords are synced in all platforms with no issues - ios, android, mac, linux, windows etc... - very easy to use -
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Been using this for many many years. It does exactly what I need - lots more in fact. I initially tried others but most charge a fee. I am not a coder, albeit I have worked in an around IT for a long time , and have an (un?)healthy interest in computing, but I really don't understand what is so complicated for some. I have found it more than worth the minor effort involved in learning how to use it for the benefit it provides in daily use.
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I have spent four hours trying to get this to work, so far I have one database and one entry into it, which I just deleted trying to enter a new entry. The tutorial is brutally difficult to follow, it depends on a level of coding expertise that I don't have time to develop. (I'm 67) I was looking for a password manager that would function like the one that comes with the Brave browser, and this isn't that, not even close. The reviews are amazing, but I think (after trying to make it work) that all the reviewers are either professional code writers or hackers. The complexity of the menus should have let me know that I would never be able to make it work, but then by accident I found the tutorial. For me, it's faster and easier to make a paper diary with all my passwords. I'd just keep using Brave, but it just deleted all my passwords. Guess I'll just repopulate that one at a time with my paper backup. The scary thing is how dependent the rest of us are, and how poorly you coders communicate directions for using the tools that you make.