The cost of the annual individual plan will be shifting from
$35.88 per year to $47.88, representing a price rise of
$12 per year, $1 per month, or a 33% increase. Similarly, the
family plan will rise from $59.88 to $71.88. This is also a
$12 per year increase, or a 20% price hike.
What a non-surprise! They move to a stupid 'subscription' format and
then keep raising the price. All these 'subscription'-based and cloud-
based apps and services (including streaming tv) are just a greedy money-grab.-a :-\
Prices in US$.
-a-a Price hike: 1Password increasing the cost of annual plans
-a-a ---------------------------------------------------------
-a-a Password management tool 1Password is raising its prices by
-a-a $12 per year, making the free Apple Passwords more attractive
-a-a to iPhone users.
-a-a Subscribers of 1Password have been warned by the company of
-a-a upcoming price hikes to the password manager. Starting from
-a-a March 27, users will be paying more for its yearly
-a-a subscription plans.
-a-a The cost of the annual individual plan will be shifting from
-a-a $35.88 per year to $47.88, representing a price rise of
-a-a $12 per year, $1 per month, or a 33% increase. Similarly, the
-a-a family plan will rise from $59.88 to $71.88. This is also a
-a-a $12 per year increase, or a 20% price hike.
-a-a For subscribers, the new pricing will take effect the next
-a-a time they renew their plan after that date, reports The Verge.
-a-a In the email, 1Password explains that the raises will help it
-a-a continue to invest in its product and add new features. These
-a-a recent additions include phishing protection and the ability
-a-a to add payment details.
-a-a To 1Password's credit, it does say that the prices have
-a-a remained at about the same level for a few years. This is a
-a-a rarity in a market that is extremely familiar with frequent
-a-a price increases.
-a-a However, this does give users an incentive to consider their
-a-a options.
-a-a One could be switching over to Apple's own Passwords app, also
-a-a referred to as the Keychain, which works seamlessly across the
-a-a ecosystem. It also works on Windows, and even has browser
-a-a plugins enabling it to autofill websites in Firefox and others.
-a-a For Apple users, Apple Passwords is a viable option. And,
-a-a better yet, it's free.
-a-a <https://appleinsider.com/articles/26/02/24/price-hike-1password- increasing-the-cost-of-annual-plans>
-a-a
Bitwarden works great for me. Cross-platform, no login or device
limits, passkeys, multiple identities and credit card fill ins, and free.
On 25.02.26 16:20, badgolferman wrote:
Bitwarden works great for me. Cross-platform, no login or device
limits, passkeys, multiple identities and credit card fill ins, and free.
Bitwarden is FOSS.
J||rg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
On 25.02.26 16:20, badgolferman wrote:
Bitwarden works great for me. Cross-platform, no login or deviceBitwarden is FOSS.
limits, passkeys, multiple identities and credit card fill ins, and free. >>
Does that mean you like it or donrCOt like it.
| Sysop: | Amessyroom |
|---|---|
| Location: | Fayetteville, NC |
| Users: | 59 |
| Nodes: | 6 (0 / 6) |
| Uptime: | 18:06:32 |
| Calls: | 810 |
| Calls today: | 1 |
| Files: | 1,287 |
| D/L today: |
10 files (21,017K bytes) |
| Messages: | 193,396 |