• How to use Bitwarden in Chrome

    From Fokke Nauta@21:1/5 to All on Tue May 23 14:45:16 2023
    Hi all,

    A friend of mine is using a Samsung tab, the Galaxy TAB 20 2018 10.5.
    She is using the Chrome browser and has installed the Bitwarden app. On
    a Windows PC she is using the Chrome browser as well and has installed Bitwarden. In the Chrome browser the Bitwarden extension is visable and
    she can use it. On het tab not. I cannot find any way to use the
    Bitwarden app in Chrome.
    Any of you has an idea?
    Many thanks beforehand.

    Fokke Nauta

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  • From VanguardLH@21:1/5 to Fokke Nauta on Wed May 24 17:05:18 2023
    Fokke Nauta <usenet@solfon.nl> wrote:

    A friend of mine is using a Samsung tab, the Galaxy TAB 20 2018 10.5.
    She is using the Chrome browser and has installed the Bitwarden app.
    On a Windows PC she is using the Chrome browser as well and has
    installed Bitwarden. In the Chrome browser the Bitwarden extension is
    visable and she can use it. On het tab not. I cannot find any way to
    use the Bitwarden app in Chrome.

    Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
    That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome. If you want a
    web browser to which you can install add-ons, look at Firefox Mobile
    (and variants of Firefox may also permit add-ons).

    https://www.guidingtech.com/best-android-browsers-with-extension-support/

    If you want a web browser you can customize by using extensions, you do
    NOT use Chrome. Alas, it's not all great for Firefox Mobile either.
    Security or behaviorial tweaks you can make in Firefox Desktop using about:config are not availble for Firefox Mobile, because users no
    longer have access to about:config to get at the advanced settings. The
    major draw to mobile platforms is, well, they're mobile, but are no
    where as robust in hardware, OS, and apps as are desktop platforms. Unfortunately, many apps, and even web sites, are dumbing down to the
    lowest common denominator: mobile platforms.

    Google gets revenue from their ads, and tracking (e.g., Google
    Analytics) that they provide to their customers (i.e., web sites that
    employ Google Analytics). The mobile market overtook desktop computers,
    so mobile platforms, especially Android, are the most common devices
    doing the Web.

    https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share

    Google wants to push their Manifest v3 onto desktop web browsers, too.
    This severely cripples most adblockers. Those that switched to V3 are
    not nearly as robust, or sometimes nearly unusable, as for those that
    support the old V2 manifest spec. Mozilla said they will support both
    V2 and V3 for now in Firefox, but how long that lasts is unknown. While Mozilla has their own agenda, much of it follows what Google does.

    https://www.cpomagazine.com/data-privacy/mozilla-solves-the-manifest-v3-puzzle-to-save-ad-blockers-from-chromapocalypse/

    Google didn't just target mobile platforms by throttling their Chrome
    web browser by not allowing any extensions to it. They also want to do
    the same on desktops with Manfest V3. Adblockers cut into their ad and tracking revenues.

    Your friend will have to decide: continue using Chrome that does not
    permit extensions, or switch to a different web browser that does permit extensions.

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  • From Fokke Nauta@21:1/5 to VanguardLH on Thu May 25 09:42:54 2023
    On 25/05/2023 00:05, VanguardLH wrote:
    Fokke Nauta <usenet@solfon.nl> wrote:

    A friend of mine is using a Samsung tab, the Galaxy TAB 20 2018 10.5.
    She is using the Chrome browser and has installed the Bitwarden app.
    On a Windows PC she is using the Chrome browser as well and has
    installed Bitwarden. In the Chrome browser the Bitwarden extension is
    visable and she can use it. On het tab not. I cannot find any way to
    use the Bitwarden app in Chrome.

    Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
    That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome. If you want a
    web browser to which you can install add-ons, look at Firefox Mobile
    (and variants of Firefox may also permit add-ons).

    https://www.guidingtech.com/best-android-browsers-with-extension-support/

    If you want a web browser you can customize by using extensions, you do
    NOT use Chrome. Alas, it's not all great for Firefox Mobile either.
    Security or behaviorial tweaks you can make in Firefox Desktop using about:config are not availble for Firefox Mobile, because users no
    longer have access to about:config to get at the advanced settings. The major draw to mobile platforms is, well, they're mobile, but are no
    where as robust in hardware, OS, and apps as are desktop platforms. Unfortunately, many apps, and even web sites, are dumbing down to the
    lowest common denominator: mobile platforms.

    Google gets revenue from their ads, and tracking (e.g., Google
    Analytics) that they provide to their customers (i.e., web sites that
    employ Google Analytics). The mobile market overtook desktop computers,
    so mobile platforms, especially Android, are the most common devices
    doing the Web.

    https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share

    Google wants to push their Manifest v3 onto desktop web browsers, too.
    This severely cripples most adblockers. Those that switched to V3 are
    not nearly as robust, or sometimes nearly unusable, as for those that
    support the old V2 manifest spec. Mozilla said they will support both
    V2 and V3 for now in Firefox, but how long that lasts is unknown. While Mozilla has their own agenda, much of it follows what Google does.

    https://www.cpomagazine.com/data-privacy/mozilla-solves-the-manifest-v3-puzzle-to-save-ad-blockers-from-chromapocalypse/

    Google didn't just target mobile platforms by throttling their Chrome
    web browser by not allowing any extensions to it. They also want to do
    the same on desktops with Manfest V3. Adblockers cut into their ad and tracking revenues.

    Your friend will have to decide: continue using Chrome that does not
    permit extensions, or switch to a different web browser that does permit extensions.


    Thanks very much.

    I will install Firefox, and will work from there.
    I'll come back on this issue.

    Fokke

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  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to Fokke Nauta on Sat May 27 08:42:24 2023
    Fokke Nauta wrote:

    I will install Firefox, and will work from there.

    The release version of firefox mobile only allows add-ons from a curated
    list, the nightly version allows all add-ons.

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  • From VanguardLH@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Sat May 27 13:31:57 2023
    Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> wrote:

    Fokke Nauta wrote:

    I will install Firefox, and will work from there.

    The release version of firefox mobile only allows add-ons from a curated list, the nightly version allows all add-ons.

    https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/bitwarden-password-manager

    The Bitwarden add-on is in Mozilla's add-on store. Bitwarden's web site
    points to the Android store to get the app at https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.x8bit.bitwarden.
    Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
    the app, or both.

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  • From Fokke Nauta@21:1/5 to VanguardLH on Sun May 28 13:18:44 2023
    On 27/05/2023 20:31, VanguardLH wrote:
    Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> wrote:

    Fokke Nauta wrote:

    I will install Firefox, and will work from there.

    The release version of firefox mobile only allows add-ons from a curated
    list, the nightly version allows all add-ons.

    https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/bitwarden-password-manager

    The Bitwarden add-on is in Mozilla's add-on store. Bitwarden's web site points to the Android store to get the app at https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.x8bit.bitwarden.
    Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
    the app, or both.

    Thanks!
    I will try it out.

    Fokke

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  • From mike@21:1/5 to V@nguard.LH on Mon May 29 01:31:28 2023
    On 25-05-2023 03:35 VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
    That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome.

    I didn't know that. https://browserhow.com/installing-extensions-on-android-chromium-browser-experimental/

    So I looked up why an extension wouldn't be allowed on an Android Chrome
    and what came up, surprisingly, was that you can do it if you want to. https://virgool.io/@Androidtechniques/how-to-install-chrome-browser-extensions-on-android-kznqijlfcmtx

    But you have to use a chromium browser to do it, not the Chrome browser. https://www.ghacks.net/2021/11/22/how-to-get-chrome-extensions-on-android/

    So I didn't know about this until you said it, but it's apparently only a limitation in the one specific Chrome browser and not in Android browsers. https://www.minitool.com/news/install-chrome-extensions-android.html

    Which means if you switch to any different browser than Chrome, you're ok. https://www.lifewire.com/best-chrome-extensions-for-android-4177840

    And then there's this confusing article about installing Chrome extensions. https://www.makeuseof.com/chrome-extensions-android-mobile/

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  • From VanguardLH@21:1/5 to mike on Sun May 28 16:39:32 2023
    mike <this@address.is.invalid> wrote:

    VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
    That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome.

    I didn't know that. https://browserhow.com/installing-extensions-on-android-chromium-browser-experimental/

    So I looked up why an extension wouldn't be allowed on an Android Chrome
    and what came up, surprisingly, was that you can do it if you want to. https://virgool.io/@Androidtechniques/how-to-install-chrome-browser-extensions-on-android-kznqijlfcmtx

    But you have to use a chromium browser to do it, not the Chrome browser. https://www.ghacks.net/2021/11/22/how-to-get-chrome-extensions-on-android/

    The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
    use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
    web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
    not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.

    The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
    stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
    products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.

    https://gs.statcounter.com/browser-market-share

    There are a lot more Android phones than Apple hence why Chrome has the
    major mobile web browser market share. Safari follows for Apple phone's
    market share. For anyone picking a non-bundled web browser as their
    choice, you're into the miniscule market share. I use Firefox on my
    desktop and smartphone. Yep, I'm in the major minority.

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  • From mike@21:1/5 to V@nguard.LH on Mon May 29 04:05:00 2023
    On 28-05-2023 15:39 VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
    stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
    products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.

    Given almost all browsers are based on only three underlying variants, why would anyone be 'stuck' on any one specific browser such that they would
    live with its infirmaries when there are many browsers to choose from?

    webkit
    chromium
    mozilla

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  • From Patron Saint@21:1/5 to VanguardLH on Mon May 29 06:37:45 2023
    On Sat, 27 May 2023 13:31:57 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:
    Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
    the app, or both.

    Can someone who uses it explain what this Bitwarden app extension does?

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  • From VanguardLH@21:1/5 to mike on Sun May 28 21:09:22 2023
    mike <this@address.is.invalid> wrote:

    On 28-05-2023 15:39 VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
    stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
    products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came
    pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.

    Given almost all browsers are based on only three underlying variants, why would anyone be 'stuck' on any one specific browser such that they would
    live with its infirmaries when there are many browsers to choose from?

    webkit
    chromium
    mozilla

    Users use what they are given. You're addressing the wrong audience
    here regarding what most users do. Folks here are accustomed to looking
    for alternatives to just about everything.

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  • From VanguardLH@21:1/5 to Patron Saint on Sun May 28 21:07:34 2023
    Patron Saint <patron@saint.com> wrote:

    VanguardLH wrote:

    Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
    the app, or both.

    Can someone who uses it explain what this Bitwarden app extension does?

    Password manager. And I don't use it, but I can read its web site.

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  • From Joerg Lorenz@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 29 09:03:39 2023
    Am 29.05.23 um 00:37 schrieb Patron Saint:
    On Sat, 27 May 2023 13:31:57 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:
    Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
    the app, or both.

    Can someone who uses it explain what this Bitwarden app extension does?

    Is Google defect at your end?

    --
    Gutta cavat lapidem (Ovid)

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  • From Fokke Nauta@21:1/5 to VanguardLH on Mon May 29 09:27:23 2023
    On 28/05/2023 23:39, VanguardLH wrote:
    mike <this@address.is.invalid> wrote:

    VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
    That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome.

    I didn't know that.
    https://browserhow.com/installing-extensions-on-android-chromium-browser-experimental/

    So I looked up why an extension wouldn't be allowed on an Android Chrome
    and what came up, surprisingly, was that you can do it if you want to.
    https://virgool.io/@Androidtechniques/how-to-install-chrome-browser-extensions-on-android-kznqijlfcmtx

    But you have to use a chromium browser to do it, not the Chrome browser.
    https://www.ghacks.net/2021/11/22/how-to-get-chrome-extensions-on-android/

    The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
    use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
    web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
    not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.

    The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
    stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
    products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.

    That's correct.

    https://gs.statcounter.com/browser-market-share

    There are a lot more Android phones than Apple hence why Chrome has the
    major mobile web browser market share. Safari follows for Apple phone's market share. For anyone picking a non-bundled web browser as their
    choice, you're into the miniscule market share. I use Firefox on my
    desktop and smartphone. Yep, I'm in the major minority.

    On my desktop I use both Chrome and Firefox.

    Fokke

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  • From Fokke Nauta@21:1/5 to Patron Saint on Mon May 29 09:36:57 2023
    On 29/05/2023 00:37, Patron Saint wrote:
    On Sat, 27 May 2023 13:31:57 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:
    Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
    the app, or both.

    Can someone who uses it explain what this Bitwarden app extension does?

    Bitwarden is a free password manager.
    I don't use it myself.

    Fokke

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  • From VanguardLH@21:1/5 to Fokke Nauta on Mon May 29 05:44:35 2023
    Fokke Nauta <usenet@solfon.nl> wrote:

    On my desktop I use both Chrome and Firefox.

    After Microsoft switched to Blink for the rendering engine and V8 for
    the script interperter, and because Edge has more settings that don't
    require add-ons needed for Chrome, like foreground focus when loading a
    new tab instead of doing in background, and more security settings, I
    got rid of Chrome. I already had Chrome in Edge-Chromium, and didn't
    feel like having 2 Chromium variants on my desktop. On my smartphone, I
    have both Chrome (because it came bundled) and Firefox, with Firefox as
    the default/primary web browser. Firefox Mobile has a Quit option that actually unloads the app instead of leaving it run in the background as
    do other web browsers, so the purge-on-exit settings in Firefox actually
    are enforced.

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  • From Ken Blake@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 29 07:21:53 2023
    On Mon, 29 May 2023 04:05:00 +0530, mike <this@address.is.invalid>
    wrote:

    On 28-05-2023 15:39 VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
    stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
    products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came
    pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.

    Given almost all browsers are based on only three underlying variants, why >would anyone be 'stuck' on any one specific browser such that they would
    live with its infirmaries when there are many browsers to choose from?


    Although I try to stay out of infirmaries, I stick with FireFox
    because I like it the best,

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  • From Walter Jones@21:1/5 to Theo on Tue May 30 18:59:39 2023
    Theo <theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk> wrote

    The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
    use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
    web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
    not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.

    No, the solution is to use the Bitwarden app: https://bitwarden.com/help/getting-started-mobile/
    which uses various auto-fill services, depending on your version of Android. https://bitwarden.com/help/auto-fill-android/

    That should work with any browser, and perhaps non-browser apps too.

    Where does bitwarden store those passwords?
    Are they stored on someone else's computer or on your own computer?

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  • From Theo@21:1/5 to VanguardLH on Tue May 30 23:27:30 2023
    VanguardLH <V@nguard.lh> wrote:
    The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
    use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
    web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
    not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.

    No, the solution is to use the Bitwarden app: https://bitwarden.com/help/getting-started-mobile/
    which uses various auto-fill services, depending on your version of Android. https://bitwarden.com/help/auto-fill-android/

    That should work with any browser, and perhaps non-browser apps too.

    Theo

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  • From Theo@21:1/5 to Walter Jones on Wed May 31 10:36:52 2023
    Walter Jones <walterjones@invalid.nospam> wrote:
    Theo <theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk> wrote

    The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
    use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
    web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does >> not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.

    No, the solution is to use the Bitwarden app: https://bitwarden.com/help/getting-started-mobile/
    which uses various auto-fill services, depending on your version of Android.
    https://bitwarden.com/help/auto-fill-android/

    That should work with any browser, and perhaps non-browser apps too.

    Where does bitwarden store those passwords?
    Are they stored on someone else's computer or on your own computer?

    They're stored in a cache on your computer and they are synced (encrypted)
    with a Bitwarden server. The company runs their own server, but you can
    also install their server software and run it on a local machine (eg
    Raspberry Pi or similar), in which case everything is kept local. There is also a third party project called Vaultwarden that is a lighter weight local server than Bitwarden's own (which is designed to scale and so consumes more resources).

    Theo

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  • From Fokke Nauta@21:1/5 to Theo on Thu Jun 1 13:40:10 2023
    On 31/05/2023 00:27, Theo wrote:
    VanguardLH <V@nguard.lh> wrote:
    The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
    use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
    web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
    not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.

    No, the solution is to use the Bitwarden app: https://bitwarden.com/help/getting-started-mobile/
    which uses various auto-fill services, depending on your version of Android. https://bitwarden.com/help/auto-fill-android/

    That should work with any browser, and perhaps non-browser apps too.

    Theo

    Thanks.

    I've installed the Bitwarden app but wasn't able to add it to Chrome.
    Perhaps the links you showed may help me out.
    I'll give it a try.

    Fokke

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