|
|
|
|
|
by unqueued
1580 days ago
|
|
As it becomes easier to emulate hardware tokens[1], Google may start limiting which ones it accepts. I believe they can use attestation keys to do that. This is just a softer layer of security to slow down less sophisticated mass signup attempts. Google may very well eventually phase out TOTP, under the justification that it is not as secure, but I would be shocked if they ever retire the highly insecure SMS verification. |
|
Why? I hope they don't, as I'm relying on my password manager to emulate a hardware token so I can finally log in to websites without needing a username/password.
At its core, FIDO2 is an authentication API, so the site can ask your browser to authenticate you (in whatever way the browser wants). If that's "talk to the password manager to authenticate the user using some fancy cryptography", why does the authenticating site care?
I'm looking forward to the day when my password manager only has one credential in it, my soft-FIDO2 private key.