ANONguard vs Passy - cross-platform password manager

Side-by-side comparison of two open source alternatives

A

ANONguard

ANONguard anonymises the Internet connection. In the process, the IP address of the smartphone is hidden with the help of the AN.ON anonymisation service (https://anon.inf.tu-dresden.de/).

Passy - cross-platform password manager

Store passwords, payment cards notes, ID cards and identities offline and safe, synchronized between all of your devices. Features: Security - All your information is encrypted in AES and stored offline on your devices, providing highest-tier security.Synchronization - Share data between separate devices within seconds.2FA codes - Keep your 2FA codes safe and sound in offline storage.Entry sharing – Send entries to your friends and family.Biometrics - Quickly unlock the app using your fingerprint.Multipurpose - Store passwords, payment cards, notes, id cards and identities, all in one place.Autofill - Quickly fill fields in apps and websites without having to open the app.Browser extension - Use autofill and add new entries on the fly right from your browser. (See https://github.com/GlitterWare/Passy-Browser-Extension)Passy Cloud - Support this free project and get secure, automatic online synchronization in return. (disabled by default - base app and manual QR-powered sync remain free forever) Official website Permissions: Internet - needed for synchronization, happens locally, with direct connection between devices.External storage - needed for backups/exporting.Biometric - needed for biometric authentication as an alternative to login with master password.Camera - needed for scanning QR codes for easy synchronization.

FeatureANONguardPassy - cross-platform password manager
LicenseBSD-3-ClauseGPL-3.0-only
Install sources
F-Droid
F-DroidGitHub
Categories
Password ManagerMessagingBrowser
Password ManagerBrowser
Features
Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking
Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking
Platforms
Android
Android
Website
Source code