What is KeyCat?
It is an open-source end-to-end encrypted password manager. It can manage all your credentials and lets you share them with others. The idea is to make a password manager that can work offline and sync when there's a connection available to the server. Like an auto-sync keepass.
KeyCat is a tool in the Password Management category of a tech stack.
KeyCat is an open source tool with 121 GitHub stars and 5 GitHub forks. Here’s a link to KeyCat's open source repository on GitHub
Who uses KeyCat?
Developers
KeyCat's Features
- Everything is encrypted end-to-end using NaCL via tweetnacl.js
- Single executable for the server
- Can import from keepass (v.3 for now)
- Multiple teams and vaults
- Each team and vault can be independently managed and shared with others
- Multiple credentials per site
- API available to third-party software
KeyCat Alternatives & Comparisons
What are some alternatives to KeyCat?
Slack
Imagine all your team communication in one place, instantly searchable, available wherever you go. That’s Slack. All your messages. All your files. And everything from Twitter, Dropbox, Google Docs, Asana, Trello, GitHub and dozens of other services. All together.
Jira
Jira's secret sauce is the way it simplifies the complexities of software development into manageable units of work.
Jira comes out-of-the-box with everything agile teams need to ship value to customers faster.
Trello
Trello is a collaboration tool that organizes your projects into boards. In one glance, Trello tells you what's being worked on, who's working on what, and where something is in a process.
G Suite
An integrated suite of secure, cloud-native collaboration and productivity apps. It includes Gmail, Docs, Drive, Calendar, Meet and more.
Confluence
Capture the knowledge that's too often lost in email inboxes and shared network drives in Confluence instead – where it's easy to find, use, and update.