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Adds Notable Mentions to Password Managers section
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@ -79,10 +79,21 @@ Be aware that no software is perfect- there will always be bugs and vulnerabilit
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| Provider | Description |
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**[BitWarden](https://bitwarden.com)** | Free and open source, cross-platform password manager with sync
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**[KeePassXC](https://keepassxc.org)** | Open source, secure password manager, but without cloud-sync capabilities. KeePassXC is a community fork of [KeePass](https://keepass.info/)
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**[BitWarden](https://bitwarden.com)** | Fully-featured, open source password manager with cloud-sync. BitWarden is easy-to-use with a clean UI and client apps for desktop, web and mobile.
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**[KeePass](https://keepass.info)** | Hardened open source, secure password manager, without cloud-sync capabilities. See also [KeePassXC](https://keepassxc.org), [KeePassX](https://www.keepassx.org) and [KeePass Web](https://keeweb.info) which are popular community forks of KeePass, with additional features and UI refinements
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**[LessPass](https://lesspass.com)** *(Self-Hosted)* | LessPass is a little different, since it generates your passwords using a hash of the website name, your username and a single master-passphrase that you reuse. It omits the need for you to ever need to store or sync your passwords. They have apps for all the common platforms and a CLI, but you can also self-host it.
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**[1Password](https://1password.com)** | Fully-featured cross-platform password manager with sync. Free for self-hosted data (or $3/ month hosted). Note: not yet fully open source, but regularly publishes results of indepentand security [audits](https://support.1password.com/security-assessments)
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**[1Password](https://1password.com)** | Fully-featured cross-platform password manager with sync. Free for self-hosted data (or $3/ month hosted). Be aware that 1Password is not fully open source, but they do regularly publish results of their indepentand security [audits](https://support.1password.com/security-assessments)
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#### Notable Mentions
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[Passbolt](https://www.passbolt.com), [Buttercup](https://buttercup.pw), [Firefox Loxkwise](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/lockwise), [Clipperz](https://clipperz.is), [Password Safe](https://pwsafe.org), [Pass](https://www.passwordstore.org), [Encryptr](https://spideroak.com/encryptr), [Padloc](https://padloc.app), [TeamPass](https://teampass.net), [PSONO](https://psono.com), [UPM](http://upm.sourceforge.net), [Gorilla](https://github.com/zdia/gorilla/wiki), [Pass](https://www.passwordstore.org) (UNIX), [Seahorse](https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/seahorse) (for GNOME), [GNOME Keyring](https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GnomeKeyring), [KDE Wallet Manager](https://userbase.kde.org/KDE_Wallet_Manager).
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If you are using a depricated PM, you should migrate to something activley maintained. This includes: [Mitro](https://www.mitro.co), [Rattic](https://spideroak.com/encryptr), [JPasswords](http://jpws.sourceforge.net/jpasswords.html), [Passopolis](https://passopolis.com), [KYPS](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KYPS), [Factotum](http://man.9front.org/4/factotum).
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Choose an open source option if possible. Use a very strong master password.
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**See also** [Password Management Checklist](/README.md#passwords)
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## 2-Factor Authentication
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