I've been happy with 1Password for teams. They have a white paper, which outlines their encryption strategy clearly, and their family of apps have worked great.
Of course, when sharing 'vaults' with team members you have to remember that each vault is only as strong as the weakest master password of everyone on the team.
1password for families. Create multiple shared vaults. Automatically create and store password for each service you signup to. Worth every penny. Happy user here.
I signed up for LastPass a few months ago because I got tired of keeping track of credentials for so many accounts. For $12 a year it is nice to sync across devices and be able to have peace of mind.
Also they have a command-line tool that I can use to copy passwords to the clipboard for SSH.
I second Enpass. I'm surprised at how little press it gets given its user friendless, platform support, pricing, and multitude of supported sync platforms.
1password on computer and iPhone. Generates strong password for every stupid site that wants a login and store it for easy use should I need to return to the site.
I use Lastpass, but got paranoid (and will forever be) about someone hacking it. I developed my own command line tool that doesnt use the internet for anything, albeit its much less convenient for me when at work, but gives me piece of mind that its no longer an attack vector (unless someone gets through my workstation).
By "commandline tool" do you mean a password encryption program? Implementing your own cryptographic procedures is highly inadvisable (unless you're an expert in the field). If you're not storing particularly sensitive data you should be fine with a homebrew application, otherwise, you probably ought to use something else. Keepass is pretty good security-wise; it is open source and widely used and does not rely on any network connections.
passwordSafe. It runs fine on Windows and on Linux under Wine. I have never tried an alternative, to be honest, as it does a good job - double-click to copy password, an option to display certain characters from password, auto-generation of new passwords, hierarchically organised and searchable.
When sharing passwords with a team when using passwordSafe, we had to share the same sign-in password - not ideal.
1Password for Teams and 1Password personal. I use 1Password because, even with their sync service, 1Password's central systems don't ever receive the keys required to decrypt the passwords. That is, 1Password's sync infrastructure is completely untrusted. That's what sold me compared to other options.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 21.0 ms ] threadOf course, when sharing 'vaults' with team members you have to remember that each vault is only as strong as the weakest master password of everyone on the team.
Also they have a command-line tool that I can use to copy passwords to the clipboard for SSH.
I generate a random password for every site which requires a login.
Still use some "pattern" passwords for things I want to remember should my 1P break for some reason.
When sharing passwords with a team when using passwordSafe, we had to share the same sign-in password - not ideal.
More: https://1password.com/teams/white-paper/