this post was submitted on 17 Feb 2026
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Copy pasting a comment that I saw on Reddit
——
Link to the original study (with a less sensationalized title):
https://zkae.io/
A few important notes:
the study is about Bitwarden, LastPass, Dashlane and 1Password. Proton Pass isn't mentioned.
the study presumes that they're working with a malicious server (read this as compromised server, controlled by an attacker). The attacks they talk about in the article would not work on a normal server. Here's their quote:
I too recommend KeepassXC, works even on android with KeepassDX. I use syncthing to sync between devices (work, personal and android)
I also use KeepassXC, and it's great. I'm interested in setting up Syncthing between my Android, Linux desktop, and NAS. Do you have any tips or articles/resources that you used to set it up?
Although syncthing is awesome, i use rclone to fetch the latest version of the password database. With syncthing, i would worry about collisions. Maybe would be better to sync it between two devices, Android and Linux.
Hmm, I don't think I've optimized it either to be fair. I wanted to use my phone as a 'bridge in between' but that means it uses battery since it 'checks' whats online.
In reality my phone is usually on demand and since I work from home, my work device is usually still turned on when I turn on my 'good computer' with fun projects.
One thing that I find useful is the backup / version control settings, I've set it up that there is a version control if it overwrites things so that when conflicts happen (eg a sync didn't happen and I changed both keepass databases) I can quickly 'merge' them or sync them up manually.
I've also heard that syncthing isn't available on android anymore but a fork (that is somewhat vetted, iirc) exist.
If you can run applications on your NAS & connect to it from anywhere, it could be used as a type of 'master' server that keeps everything in sync that is always online.
That is helpful, thank you! I will look into the master server option. I can spin up Docker containers on the NAS.
Is your data in KeePass encrypted?
Yes, it's encrypted. Wouldn't be much of a point if it was just plaintext.