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06:53
Your browser shows the signature chain for the TLS certificates in use.
I have been trying to generate a passkey multiple ways and failing. Is there a simple guide to produce and/or validate a passkey on the linux command line?
 
5 hours later…
12:10
34
Q: Does Ubuntu support passkeys, like Apple, Google and Microsoft do?

FlimmPasskeys are a new feature that is being supported more and more. The FIDO alliance released a standard for passkeys. Apple announced support for passkeys on iOS 16 and macOS with Safari 16.1, Google say they will support it in Chrome, and Microsoft will support it in Edge and Windows Hello. PayP...

 
1 hour later…
13:21
All those require additional hardware.
 
1 hour later…
14:50
No
KeepassX is software, not hardware. Bitwarden is software, not hardware.
Direct quote:
> Instead of using an USB-key like the Google Titan or the Yubikey, or a phone or tablet as additional hardware, You could use a password management software. The only one I have tried is KeePassXC.
 
3 hours later…
17:27
you'll still need to trust someone to keep the keys safe. Standard CA cert, or self-signed, PGP or another protocol.... none of those solve your main requirement which is basically "trust no one". All of your security starts there and when you answer the main question which is "who do you trust?"

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