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by cyberax
356 days ago
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> Except it means backing up or moving your credentials is somewhere between a pain and infeasible That's the point. > and you're requiring people to go buy another device for little to no real security benefit. No. The benefit is clearly there: hardware-originated keys can not be stolen under any normal circumstances. Meanwhile, synced passkeys are just fancy login/password pairs, so they can be exfiltrated by an attacker. E.g. by scanning the RAM of the passkey manager. Of course, the operating system can try to add additional barriers, but the underlying keys must at some point be in clear text form. |
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Normal people are however not concerned with these Mission Impossible scenarios, and random passwords are good enough while being easy to use without an IT department to fix when it goes wrong. A password manager (which every browser has built in) already associates passwords to domains for phishing resistance. Users already should never need to enter a password manually unless the site did something stupid to try to block the password manager from working.