Nice article about the migration! I also recently moved to Bitwarden and love that it's open-source.
However, you should keep in mind to delete by overwriting the export-file and not "just" delete it in the file browser. Otherwise it could be restored in the future and leak all your passwords. This is a big security vulnerability!
Software developer, Technical writer, and long-life learner. I enjoy creating software from scratch and sharing knowledge with stunning technical articles. Visit my website -> https://danidiaztech.com
Yes and no. It will delete the file in the eyes of the user by freeing the linked data blocks on the drive. Physically the data is still there.
Therefore it is important to overwrite these data blocks, for example by using shred -u -n 10 passwords.csv.
Otherwhise these data blocks could be restored later.
Software developer, Technical writer, and long-life learner. I enjoy creating software from scratch and sharing knowledge with stunning technical articles. Visit my website -> https://danidiaztech.com
Nice article about the migration! I also recently moved to Bitwarden and love that it's open-source.
However, you should keep in mind to delete by overwriting the export-file and not "just" delete it in the file browser. Otherwise it could be restored in the future and leak all your passwords. This is a big security vulnerability!
In Linux I just do:
That will delete the passwords file without placing it in the trash
Yes and no. It will delete the file in the eyes of the user by freeing the linked data blocks on the drive. Physically the data is still there.
Therefore it is important to overwrite these data blocks, for example by using
shred -u -n 10 passwords.csv
.Otherwhise these data blocks could be restored later.
Wow, really interesting!
You taught me something today 😄