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  1. At Bitwarden, we share a sense of purpose—helping the global community of online users manage their sensitive information easily and securely. Our open source software is the foundation of who we are as a company, with transparency and collaboration at the forefront of our core values.
  2. Bitwarden Vault Security. Since all of your data is fully encrypted before it ever leaves your device, only you have access to it. Not even the team at Bitwarden can read your data, even if we wanted to. Your data is sealed with end-to-end AES-256 bit encryption, salted hashing, and PBKDF2 SHA-256. Learn more about Bitwarden security.
© Provided by TechRepublic Image: Jack Wallen

Bitwarden is an active open source project, so there’s ample support in the form of an online community, tutorials, knowledge base, and forums. Every common feature has a well-written tutorial. Bitwarden makes it easy for you to create, store, and access your passwords. Bitwarden stores all of your logins in an encrypted vault that syncs across all of your devices. Since it's fully encrypted before it ever leaves your device, only you have access to your data. Not even the team at Bitwarden can read your data, even if we wanted to. R/Bitwarden: Bitwarden is an open source password management platform for individuals, teams, and business organizations. Press J to jump to the feed. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts.

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Bitwarden Tutorial Video

The new Send tab of the Bitwarden password manager.

The developers of the Bitwarden password manager are always looking to improve their software. When their PR guys reached out to me last week to let me know of a new feature, you can bet I was all ears. Said feature isn't a deal maker or breaker, but for some, it could fill a void found in many desktop and mobile password manager apps. That void is sharing passwords, text and files securely.

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Consider this: you have a password that you frequently have to share out with others. You use Bitwarden, so when the password is requested, you open the tool, search for the password, copy it, and paste it into a message. First, that's a lot of steps. Second, is your method of sending secure? After all, you are sending a password to a (possibly) critical service.

What do you do?

If you're using the latest version of Bitwarden (either on the desktop or your mobile device), you could simply create a new Send so it's always at the ready. With the new Bitwarden software, you can create either text or file-based Sends.

Let me show you how this works.

SEE: Identity theft protection policy (TechRepublic Premium)

What you'll need

To make this work you'll need the latest version of Bitwarden (1.25.0). To send Files, you'll need a Premium license, which is $10/yearly. I'm going to demonstrate on the desktop client, but the process is the same on the mobile version. To make this feature even better, all of your Sends will sync between clients--as long as they are associated with the same Bitwarden account.

How to create a Send

Open Bitwarden. In the new interface, you'll see a Send tab at the bottom of the left pane (Figure A).

Figure A

© Provided by TechRepublic The new Send tab of the Bitwarden password manager.

Click on the Send button and click +. At the top of the new window, select either File or Text (Figure B). Just remember, to send a file, you must have a Premium account.

Figure B

© Provided by TechRepublic The new Send add window is simple to fill out.

Let's say you want to create a Send for a password that you frequently have to share out with other staff members. Give the new Send a name, select Text, and then copy the password in the text field. Once you've done that, scroll down to the Options section and set a Deletion Date for the Send link (Figure C). This is important, as you don't want that link permanently valid.

Figure C

© Provided by TechRepublic Setting the Send options in Bitwarden.

Youtube Bitwarden

You can also set an expiration date and a max access count (how many times a user can access the send before it becomes inaccessible).

Scroll down again and create an optional password and add any notes you might want/need for the Send (Figure D).

Figure D

© Provided by TechRepublic Setting a password for the new Send in Bitwarden might ease your concern about a third-party viewing the text.

If you do set a password for the Send, you'll need to share the password with the recipient, but gaining that extra layer of security might be worth the added steps.

Click the checkbox for Copy The Link To Share This Send To My Clipboard Upon Save and click the Save button at the bottom of the window. You can now paste the Send link into an email or a message and send it to the recipient.

That's all there is to using the new Bitwarden Send feature.

Nits to pick

Of all the password managers out there, Bitwarden is my favorite. Besides being open source, Bitwarden also has the perfect ratio of features and simplicity. That ease of use is one of the reasons why I found a few nits to pick with the new Send option.

Because Bitwarden is such an easy tool to use, it surprises me that they don't have a more fully-realized sharing option built into the tool. Instead, you must opt to use an external tool to share the Send link. This leads me to my other nit: why not make it possible to quickly share an entry in the Vault?

Add a share option that would allow you to create a link to share a login entry from within your Bitwarden Vault. All you'd have to do is locate the entry to be shared and click the Share button. Fill out an email address and an encrypted link is automatically sent to the recipient.

That, of course, might be asking for too much. Given how well Bitwarden development has gone, I'd say it's a feature that should be under consideration.

Either way, if you're not already using a password manager, you owe it to yourself (and your company) to start using one. Why not go with the best in breed and use Bitwarden?

Subscribe to TechRepublic's How To Make Tech Work on YouTube for all the latest tech advice for business pros from Jack Wallen.

Also see

  • How to become a cybersecurity pro: A cheat sheet (TechRepublic)
  • Social engineering: A cheat sheet for business professionals (free PDF) (TechRepublic)
  • Shadow IT policy (TechRepublic Premium)
  • Online security 101: Tips for protecting your privacy from hackers and spies (ZDNet)
  • Cybersecurity and cyberwar: More must-read coverage (TechRepublic on Flipboard)
© Provided by TechRepublic Image: Jack Wallen

More about cybersecurity

© TechRepublic

The new Send tab of the Bitwarden password manager.

The developers of the Bitwarden password manager are always looking to improve their software. When their PR guys reached out to me last week to let me know of a new feature, you can bet I was all ears. Said feature isn't a deal maker or breaker, but for some, it could fill a void found in many desktop and mobile password manager apps. That void is sharing passwords, text and files securely.

Consider this: you have a password that you frequently have to share out with others. You use Bitwarden, so when the password is requested, you open the tool, search for the password, copy it, and paste it into a message. First, that's a lot of steps. Second, is your method of sending secure? After all, you are sending a password to a (possibly) critical service.

What do you do?

If you're using the latest version of Bitwarden (either on the desktop or your mobile device), you could simply create a new Send so it's always at the ready. With the new Bitwarden software, you can create either text or file-based Sends.

Let me show you how this works.

SEE: Identity theft protection policy (TechRepublic Premium)

What you'll need

To make this work you'll need the latest version of Bitwarden (1.25.0). To send Files, you'll need a Premium license, which is $10/yearly. I'm going to demonstrate on the desktop client, but the process is the same on the mobile version. To make this feature even better, all of your Sends will sync between clients--as long as they are associated with the same Bitwarden account.

How to create a Send

Open Bitwarden. In the new interface, you'll see a Send tab at the bottom of the left pane (Figure A).

Figure A

© Provided by TechRepublic The new Send tab of the Bitwarden password manager.

Click on the Send button and click +. At the top of the new window, select either File or Text (Figure B). Just remember, to send a file, you must have a Premium account.

Figure B

© Provided by TechRepublic The new Send add window is simple to fill out.

Let's say you want to create a Send for a password that you frequently have to share out with other staff members. Give the new Send a name, select Text, and then copy the password in the text field. Once you've done that, scroll down to the Options section and set a Deletion Date for the Send link (Figure C). This is important, as you don't want that link permanently valid.

Figure C

© Provided by TechRepublic Setting the Send options in Bitwarden.

You can also set an expiration date and a max access count (how many times a user can access the send before it becomes inaccessible).

Scroll down again and create an optional password and add any notes you might want/need for the Send (Figure D).

Figure D

© Provided by TechRepublic Setting a password for the new Send in Bitwarden might ease your concern about a third-party viewing the text.

If you do set a password for the Send, you'll need to share the password with the recipient, but gaining that extra layer of security might be worth the added steps.

Click the checkbox for Copy The Link To Share This Send To My Clipboard Upon Save and click the Save button at the bottom of the window. You can now paste the Send link into an email or a message and send it to the recipient.

That's all there is to using the new Bitwarden Send feature.

Nits to pick

Of all the password managers out there, Bitwarden is my favorite. Besides being open source, Bitwarden also has the perfect ratio of features and simplicity. That ease of use is one of the reasons why I found a few nits to pick with the new Send option.

Because Bitwarden is such an easy tool to use, it surprises me that they don't have a more fully-realized sharing option built into the tool. Instead, you must opt to use an external tool to share the Send link. This leads me to my other nit: why not make it possible to quickly share an entry in the Vault?

Add a share option that would allow you to create a link to share a login entry from within your Bitwarden Vault. All you'd have to do is locate the entry to be shared and click the Share button. Fill out an email address and an encrypted link is automatically sent to the recipient.

Bitwarden

That, of course, might be asking for too much. Given how well Bitwarden development has gone, I'd say it's a feature that should be under consideration.

Either way, if you're not already using a password manager, you owe it to yourself (and your company) to start using one. Why not go with the best in breed and use Bitwarden?

Subscribe to TechRepublic's How To Make Tech Work on YouTube for all the latest tech advice for business pros from Jack Wallen.

Bitwarden Demo

Also see

Youtube Bitwarden

  • How to become a cybersecurity pro: A cheat sheet (TechRepublic)
  • Social engineering: A cheat sheet for business professionals (free PDF) (TechRepublic)
  • Shadow IT policy (TechRepublic Premium)
  • Online security 101: Tips for protecting your privacy from hackers and spies (ZDNet)
  • Cybersecurity and cyberwar: More must-read coverage (TechRepublic on Flipboard)