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They are mandatory in current digital age.
Yes. Bitwarden.
Already do and most are receptive to it once you show them that every single one of them were caught up in a breach at some point.
But what about Bitwarden? What you say about the breach is exactly what I'm worried about when having ONE source that has EVERY password. At least now I have different passwords for different sites so only one can be affected, it's just a pain in the ass to have to go look them up. I save a portion of my passwords with cryptic messages that only I understand.
I can't think of anything that hasn't been hacked, I feel like it's just a matter of time before these password sites are too if they haven't already. :/
I disagree, at least in terms of open source solutions. Assuming Bitwarden isn't altering their server implementation without telling anyone, it is basically impossible for them to be hacked in the way you're thinking, as the servers do not hold any decrypted vault data. If the service is propreitary, you cannot trust that they are encrypting all contents before reaching their server.
Even a full plaintext master database password breach shouldn't affect a competant user, as you should obviously be using 2FA with a cloud password manager.
And even if your master password and bitwarden 2fa leaked and someone gained access to your vault, any accounts with 2FA enabled (so long as you aren't keeping 2FA keys in Bitwarden, please dont do that. [The same applies to KeePass]) can't be compromised without your second factor.