How did I have to scroll this far down to find someone who's actually read the post? Everybody seems to think the money is purely for expanding the password manager, while in the post they call out adjacent markets they want to expand to.
I'm cautiously optimistic that this could mean we won't see the end of Bitwarden, as those are areas where companies will pay big money.
It's not that people didn't read the statement, it's that people have learned not to trust statements like this. Ask all Heroku's customers who were just fired by Salesforce to focus on their enterprise offering for example.
If you're new to 1Password, you may enjoy their service because you won't have the memory/experience of the things that were taken away or "how it used to be."
Now, as for whether one should worry because the company screwed their existing customers once already ... that's personal risk tolerance, I guess
My opinion is that 1Password is the best product out there for the majority of users, because they're pretty good about documenting their formats, have a very good export story, their customer service is mostly good, it's a reasonable price, and their UX absolutely spanks Bitwarden up one side and down the other
But, if a few years from now they rip the ssh-agent out of their Electron apps citing some "well, we decided" reason, or they ban 3rd party clients from using their API because "of sekurity," then no one should be surprised that the scorpion stung them
Welcome to HN/Reddit. Most threads have people commenting without reading the article at all (or very briefly skimming). More or less just reacting to the headline.
And according to HN guidelines, we aren't supposed to comment on if someone has read the article or not. Stellar.
Given apple's push for passwordless web in collaboration w/ Google and M$ [1], I was worried that BW will go out of business, but they have plans for this and I hope they succeed.
I would love for Bitwarden to use this money to make SSO available to all pricing levels. Currently, in order to use SSO with Bitwarden you have to be on their "Enterprise" plan. I think SSO is too important to gate behind a paywall, especially for a company whose main product is security.
I'm cautiously optimistic that this could mean we won't see the end of Bitwarden, as those are areas where companies will pay big money.