| It's way simpler than you think. You reset your passkey the same way you'd reset your password. So, how do you reset your password when you forget it? Well, it depends. Some apps/sites just send you a password reset email. Apps/sites like those would reset your passkey the same way: they'd send you a passkey reset email, you'd click the link in the email, and they'd let you regenerate your passkey then and there. Some apps/sites try to do something cleverer, e.g. requiring additional factors to reset (MFA), or appointing a "trusted contact" user who can confirm your password reset, or asking "security questions" that only you know the answer to. Those apps/sites would put you through the same process to reset your passkey. "How do I reset my password when I forget it" is an infamous balancing act between user friendliness and strict security. The "reset my passkey" problem is exactly as hard, no easier and no harder, as the "reset my password" problem. (Of course, it's possible to have a site that has no way to reset your password, and just assumes that you'll never forget your password. Similarly, those sites could have no way to reset your passkey. In that case, the problem is as you say: there'd be no way to recover your keys if you lost access to them.) |
But I don't! I can write a password in any amount of low and high tech ways! I have them printed on paper in safe deposit box (my wife is bad with passwords, so this is safety if I should perish:), I have them in a password manager on USB sticks at home in a safe, I have them copied on my NAS and laptop and so on.
Whereas passkeys, it seems from everywhere I read to be far more fragile, far more locked in to specific perishable hardware device and a specific vendor ecosystem, and very limited or no ways to handle passkeys in a low tech way or as a file/artifact to be backed up. Basically they assume I live on and with my phone.
To put it bluntly:
Passwords are something I can use if I show up naked at a stranger's house. They can be with me in and through an emergency (physical emergencies exist! Computer geeks forget about those!). Or more commonly, I can use them to check my email or comms if I forget my phone at a friend's house.
Passkeys are... strictly worse?