• @[email protected]
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    4922 hours ago

    It’s shitty user experience when forced to dig out my phone to authenticate myself to a site I barely give half a shit about.

    Like I wouldn’t even have an account if it wasn’t forced, and now you assholes want my phone too?

    • @[email protected]
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      3922 hours ago

      I think you’re describing SMS passcode, totp or other such factors.

      Passcode doesn’t require phone necessarily, but you can use it too

      • @[email protected]
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        20 hours ago

        A lot of the stuff that has implemented passkeys so far are on mobile. And I mean the apps serving them out, not things you authenticate to.

        • @[email protected]
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          1120 hours ago

          BitWarden has a desktop extension and it also handles 2FA. No reason to be using a password, which is way less secure and can be extracted from a website DB via a hack.

            • @[email protected]
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              314 hours ago

              In practice, yes. IF IMPLEMENTED PROPERLY it would be extremely unlikely for an attacker to get in.

              For example with a proper implementation of TOTP it would require an attacker to guess the correct number between 1 and a million in less than a minute. Most services make you wait a little bit (often less than humans notice) between attempts and don’t allow infinite attempts, so an attacker would have to be unimaginably lucky.

              There are sadly lots of huge companies that DON’T IMPLEMENT 2FA PROPERLY. Sony Entertainment (account for PlayStation) for example. So a unique and long password is still important.

              • Natanael
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                211 hours ago

                TOTP can be phished remotely, passkeys / hardware security keys can’t (need to get malware into the users’ computer instead)

            • @[email protected]
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              112 hours ago

              It does, but not everyone sets up their 2fa, or uses the least secure forms. Then passwords get hacked, and those lists get shared so when the next hack comes along, they have that many more tools to try and break the encryption (assuming there is any) on a bigger site, compromising even more people.

              It’s a whole systemic shit bag. Passkeys were meant to solve a lot of these problems, and they would, but Big Tech is botching the execution in favor of yet another thing locking you into their ecosystem.

    • dohpaz42
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      1420 hours ago

      In store my passkeys in my password manager, which has a desktop app to access passkeys. What are you using that you have to always use your phone?

      • Natanael
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        211 hours ago

        Google Chrome on PC can let you verify from the phone to unlock passkeys

      • @[email protected]
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        1221 hours ago

        Security for who exactly?

        If I don’t even want an account, it’s the “security” of the sites ad targeting data that IDGAF.