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> I trust 1Password more than LastPass simply because you _must_ pay for it

The ultimate problem with this whole logic is that you trust that other individuals and companies are not tempted to "double-dip" by monetizing data on paying users. A comment in the reddit thread referenced in the article summarizes the problem neatly:

> These SaaS cloud services are completely unregulated and answer to no one except their own profits. They can and will hold your data hostage the moment they think they can do so profitably on a large scale. It doesn't matter whether you're paying for the service or not.

https://old.reddit.com/r/software/comments/s053t3/lastpass_i...



> The ultimate problem with this whole logic is that you trust that other individuals and companies are not tempted to "double-dip" by monetizing data on paying users. A comment in the reddit thread referenced in the article summarizes the problem neatly:

I don't think the logic is wholly broken - there will be a lower incentive for paid companies who can generate a profit with subscription fees to "double-dip" than there is for free companies to "single-dip" (who need to dip to survive).

It's all about relative risk between those two models - if company A has a business model that can work without doing shady shit, and company B has a business model that can only work if they do shady shit, then company B will be more likely to do shady shit in reality.


True, which is why I switched from 1Password to Bitwarden about 6 months ago.

If you told me my options were between LastPass and 1Password, I would rather use a physical pen & paper than LastPass, but I would at least be able to live with 1Password.




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