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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
C) Portwarden very possibly the most powerful of them all, as it allows you to backup your vault along with your attachments as well as restore them, utilizing Bitwarden-CLI. I've never used it myself but I've heard nothing but good things about this. Another link that has additional information on it.
A) BitwardenDecrypt, you take the data.json vault file (the one in the directory after you've logged in on PC.) Unlike the encrypted exports, this file actually contains the keys necessary to decrypt your vault, and you simply need to enter your master password, and you get the full content of your vault. The attachments are stored on Bitwarden's servers, and in the JSON file it's a link to an encrypted file along with an encryption key. You can also use the data.json files as backups, as if you, say, backup that file, then delete everything in your vault, putting the data.json file will sync it to your account, easy peasy. I'm unsure how Bitwarden handles deleting attachments, though, so if you did delete everything, it's possibly they'd delete the attachments too, as there'd be no reason for them to continue storing it past a certain period.
B) Bitwarden Attachment Exporter, which is a program that backups up your attachments alongside your data.json vault file.
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Currently the only way I use for store passwords and literally remember that I have an account in that platform is Bitwarden. What do you do and how could I prevent the chaos if, for example, something really bad happens to Bitwarden?
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What are people's backup strategies?