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  3. Gawd sometimes I hate passkeys.

Gawd sometimes I hate passkeys.

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  • ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG ghostonthehalfshell@masto.ai

    @karlauerbach @rodneylives @Bodling

    We might be reduced to a condition where all that knowledge stored up in various peoples heads actually mean something again.

    Just looking at the cascade of nightmare unfolding in the global economy as Asia needs to buy to oil that is now going through the Panama Canal. That canal has been suffering, a drought for several years now, and has restricted capacity. Oil tankers can pay a much higher fee than grain cargo.

    1/2

    ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG This user is from outside of this forum
    ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG This user is from outside of this forum
    ghostonthehalfshell@masto.ai
    wrote last edited by
    #29

    @karlauerbach @rodneylives @Bodling

    That means that grain is going to get more expensive for the simple reason that it will probably have to travel around the tip of South America.

    It’s a real pile of drought in America’s bread basket plus fertilizer constraints at a bad time, plus extreme weather.

    Building a supply chain with no tolerance to it. It’s kind of a problem.

    2/2

    karlauerbach@sfba.socialK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • karlauerbach@sfba.socialK karlauerbach@sfba.social

      Gawd sometimes I hate passkeys.

      I have to deal with some fairly old people - people who have lost much of their vision and who have never been particularly technically minded.

      The modern race-to-lock-everything has moved a lot of services (such as outlook) to move to passkeys.

      That's nice - unless one is trying to deal with problems for an old person who is 800 miles away.

      It appears that many of these services treat having a passkey as a one-way ratchet. Once someone (me) has set up a passkey (limited to my computer and phone) then the service switches to demand a passkey rather than the password to get in - but the old person's phone/computer does not have the passkey nor knows how to use it even if they did.

      Our present Internet - largely programmed by young people with tech knowledge and good eyesight - is becoming increasingly hard to use by older people while things (like medical services) increase security that these people do not know how to use and can't be managed remotely.

      dougfir@m.ai6yr.orgD This user is from outside of this forum
      dougfir@m.ai6yr.orgD This user is from outside of this forum
      dougfir@m.ai6yr.org
      wrote last edited by
      #30

      @karlauerbach
      We got my mom a WOW computer because it claimed to be simple for old people. We went over everything with her and labeled the various buttons, even put our phone number to call with any questions. It still "broke" and we had to drive 600 miles to fix it. It turned out the power supply had become unplugged.
      Computers and memory loss do not work well together.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • karlauerbach@sfba.socialK karlauerbach@sfba.social

        Gawd sometimes I hate passkeys.

        I have to deal with some fairly old people - people who have lost much of their vision and who have never been particularly technically minded.

        The modern race-to-lock-everything has moved a lot of services (such as outlook) to move to passkeys.

        That's nice - unless one is trying to deal with problems for an old person who is 800 miles away.

        It appears that many of these services treat having a passkey as a one-way ratchet. Once someone (me) has set up a passkey (limited to my computer and phone) then the service switches to demand a passkey rather than the password to get in - but the old person's phone/computer does not have the passkey nor knows how to use it even if they did.

        Our present Internet - largely programmed by young people with tech knowledge and good eyesight - is becoming increasingly hard to use by older people while things (like medical services) increase security that these people do not know how to use and can't be managed remotely.

        nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
        nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
        nomdeb@mstdn.social
        wrote last edited by
        #31

        @karlauerbach Dealing with my MIL's tech at her assisted living facility is a nonstop time suck. And it repeats. And nobody on staff is particularly good at helping either. At this point I've just stopped trying. If she can watch tennis on TV and get her texts on her phone, I just am too burned out with it to jump through hoops anymore. BUT I am thinking through how to set things up for ourselves in our old age. How to simplify.

        nomdeb@mstdn.socialN karlauerbach@sfba.socialK 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • nomdeb@mstdn.socialN nomdeb@mstdn.social

          @karlauerbach Dealing with my MIL's tech at her assisted living facility is a nonstop time suck. And it repeats. And nobody on staff is particularly good at helping either. At this point I've just stopped trying. If she can watch tennis on TV and get her texts on her phone, I just am too burned out with it to jump through hoops anymore. BUT I am thinking through how to set things up for ourselves in our old age. How to simplify.

          nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
          nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
          nomdeb@mstdn.social
          wrote last edited by
          #32

          @karlauerbach I should add that I handle nearly everything for my MIL (have done since my FIL died in 2024) so there's very little she needs to do herself. Just use her TV remote and phone for email and texts. Everything else I handle. Finances. Taxes. Legal stuff. Social Security. Receipts. Medicare choices. Bills. You name it.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG ghostonthehalfshell@masto.ai

            @karlauerbach @GamesMissed

            For lots of reasons, I never do banking or any kind of financial transaction on anything but my desktop. It’s that or walk into the bank and stick a card into an automatic teller.

            I just don’t see the point of doing banking transactions on something you cart around with you all day. And on that front, I’ve stopped taking my phone with me when I go outside because downtime is good.

            oddhack@mstdn.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
            oddhack@mstdn.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
            oddhack@mstdn.social
            wrote last edited by
            #33

            @GhostOnTheHalfShell @karlauerbach @GamesMissed My Novobanco website login takes my username / passcode(*), then requires authenticating me via the app on my phone (which requires only the same passcode). Every time I race to login to the app - because the notification will not show up in the app if I'm already logged in - and approve it within 30 seconds.

            (*) The passcode entry screen is a 10 digit keypad. But the numbers are not where you expect them to be. And they move, each time.

            Link Preview Image
            ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG karlauerbach@sfba.socialK 2 Replies Last reply
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            • karlauerbach@sfba.socialK karlauerbach@sfba.social

              Gawd sometimes I hate passkeys.

              I have to deal with some fairly old people - people who have lost much of their vision and who have never been particularly technically minded.

              The modern race-to-lock-everything has moved a lot of services (such as outlook) to move to passkeys.

              That's nice - unless one is trying to deal with problems for an old person who is 800 miles away.

              It appears that many of these services treat having a passkey as a one-way ratchet. Once someone (me) has set up a passkey (limited to my computer and phone) then the service switches to demand a passkey rather than the password to get in - but the old person's phone/computer does not have the passkey nor knows how to use it even if they did.

              Our present Internet - largely programmed by young people with tech knowledge and good eyesight - is becoming increasingly hard to use by older people while things (like medical services) increase security that these people do not know how to use and can't be managed remotely.

              S This user is from outside of this forum
              S This user is from outside of this forum
              shadsterling@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #34

              @karlauerbach I still haven’t seen a good concise summary of how to use passkeys in any context, but my vague impression of them is that if I enable them then my access ends when the device fails - and eventually every device will fail, so I’m not using passkeys

              karlauerbach@sfba.socialK 1 Reply Last reply
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              • gamesmissed@mastodon.socialG gamesmissed@mastodon.social

                @karlauerbach One of my parents has arthritis in their hands, and putting in a rotating passkey in 30 seconds is genuinely difficult for them some days. It makes them panic, and they just want to go back to using passwords with no time limit.

                diazona@techhub.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                diazona@techhub.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                diazona@techhub.social
                wrote last edited by
                #35

                @GamesMissed @karlauerbach Those four digit codes aren't passkeys, they're something different. (They're called TOTP authenticator codes, not that you need to know that.) Passkeys - the thing people earlier in the thread are talking about - are a newer thing, kind of like a password that's stored in your computer, and you just have to "unlock" them by doing some simple action like touching a button or scanning your fingerprint or typing in a PIN (which doesn't have to ever change). At least, that's the theoretical idea, though in practice they often wind up being kind of hard to set up.

                By the way for the 30-second rotating codes (TOTP), you might want to know that you don't have to enter the code before the next one shows up. There's a grace period where a code is still valid even though it's not showing up on the authenticator app (or whatever). I think it might be another 30 seconds, maybe longer, but I'm not sure offhand.

                karlauerbach@sfba.socialK 1 Reply Last reply
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                • diazona@techhub.socialD diazona@techhub.social

                  @GamesMissed @karlauerbach Those four digit codes aren't passkeys, they're something different. (They're called TOTP authenticator codes, not that you need to know that.) Passkeys - the thing people earlier in the thread are talking about - are a newer thing, kind of like a password that's stored in your computer, and you just have to "unlock" them by doing some simple action like touching a button or scanning your fingerprint or typing in a PIN (which doesn't have to ever change). At least, that's the theoretical idea, though in practice they often wind up being kind of hard to set up.

                  By the way for the 30-second rotating codes (TOTP), you might want to know that you don't have to enter the code before the next one shows up. There's a grace period where a code is still valid even though it's not showing up on the authenticator app (or whatever). I think it might be another 30 seconds, maybe longer, but I'm not sure offhand.

                  karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                  karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                  karlauerbach@sfba.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #36

                  @diazona @GamesMissed Thanks for the explanation.

                  (I was aware that the multiple digit 2FA numbers that come via email or text are not part of passkeys. Same for the six digit things generated my RSA keyfobs and Authenticator apps. I do not know the correct nouns for these things. BTW, I'm somewhat familiar with the workings of things based on public key cryptography - Whit Diffie worked in my computer/network security research group way back when. Here's a somewhat recent photo of me and Whit:

                  Link Preview Image

                  diazona@techhub.socialD 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • karlauerbach@sfba.socialK karlauerbach@sfba.social

                    @diazona @GamesMissed Thanks for the explanation.

                    (I was aware that the multiple digit 2FA numbers that come via email or text are not part of passkeys. Same for the six digit things generated my RSA keyfobs and Authenticator apps. I do not know the correct nouns for these things. BTW, I'm somewhat familiar with the workings of things based on public key cryptography - Whit Diffie worked in my computer/network security research group way back when. Here's a somewhat recent photo of me and Whit:

                    Link Preview Image

                    diazona@techhub.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                    diazona@techhub.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                    diazona@techhub.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #37

                    @karlauerbach @GamesMissed Understood, you don't need to prove your credentials to me. It's just that the post I was replying to was conflating passkeys and TOTP codes, and I thought clearing that up would be useful (if not to you, at least to other people reading the thread).

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • oddhack@mstdn.socialO oddhack@mstdn.social

                      @GhostOnTheHalfShell @karlauerbach @GamesMissed My Novobanco website login takes my username / passcode(*), then requires authenticating me via the app on my phone (which requires only the same passcode). Every time I race to login to the app - because the notification will not show up in the app if I'm already logged in - and approve it within 30 seconds.

                      (*) The passcode entry screen is a 10 digit keypad. But the numbers are not where you expect them to be. And they move, each time.

                      Link Preview Image
                      ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG This user is from outside of this forum
                      ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG This user is from outside of this forum
                      ghostonthehalfshell@masto.ai
                      wrote last edited by
                      #38

                      @oddhack @karlauerbach @GamesMissed

                      That sounds more frightening than I want to think about

                      oddhack@mstdn.socialO 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • S shadsterling@mastodon.social

                        @karlauerbach I still haven’t seen a good concise summary of how to use passkeys in any context, but my vague impression of them is that if I enable them then my access ends when the device fails - and eventually every device will fail, so I’m not using passkeys

                        karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                        karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                        karlauerbach@sfba.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #39

                        @ShadSterling Passkeys are somewhat clever. They use the ability of public/private crypto keys to perform an identity challenge that is unique every time it is used. The private key is stored on your machine(s) and the matching public key is on the website/service. A biometric is usually used to allow the private key to be taken from its storage (which could be a protected, trusted bit of hardware, or not) and a random challenge is sent to the website. That website has to unwrap that challenge using the public key and return the challenge (or a digest of it) back to the client and who can check whether the unwrapped challenge is correct. As with most things cryptographic, there are many devils lurking in the details and there are vulnerabilities in unexpected places - such as in public key systems one has to take care not to accept a bogus "public" key.

                        Update: I made some errors, particularly with regard to who issues the challenge and how it is processed.

                        S 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG ghostonthehalfshell@masto.ai

                          @oddhack @karlauerbach @GamesMissed

                          That sounds more frightening than I want to think about

                          oddhack@mstdn.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                          oddhack@mstdn.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                          oddhack@mstdn.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #40

                          @GhostOnTheHalfShell @karlauerbach @GamesMissed it is cursed beyond reason. Portugal is not big on accessibility in general, and this design pattern is explicitly hostile towards *everyone* using the website.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • oddhack@mstdn.socialO oddhack@mstdn.social

                            @GhostOnTheHalfShell @karlauerbach @GamesMissed My Novobanco website login takes my username / passcode(*), then requires authenticating me via the app on my phone (which requires only the same passcode). Every time I race to login to the app - because the notification will not show up in the app if I'm already logged in - and approve it within 30 seconds.

                            (*) The passcode entry screen is a 10 digit keypad. But the numbers are not where you expect them to be. And they move, each time.

                            Link Preview Image
                            karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                            karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                            karlauerbach@sfba.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #41

                            @oddhack @GhostOnTheHalfShell @GamesMissed What you are describing is not a passkey system. What you describe seems to be a name:time-based-authenticator system. Usually passkey systems only require a login name and a biometric (the biometric is processed locally on your machine and not transmitted.)

                            A lot of financial institutions use this method. Indeed many banks hand out RSA fobs to customers to use. These generate a new 6-digit authentication sequence every 30 seconds or so. There are also software versions, such as the Google Authenticator App.

                            (When I was working on various things at "the labs" sometimes we had to pass through rotating gates, kinda like jails, and we were physically locked in until we had passed all the identification/authentication tests. I never felt comfortable when locked in that way.)

                            oddhack@mstdn.socialO 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • nomdeb@mstdn.socialN nomdeb@mstdn.social

                              @karlauerbach Dealing with my MIL's tech at her assisted living facility is a nonstop time suck. And it repeats. And nobody on staff is particularly good at helping either. At this point I've just stopped trying. If she can watch tennis on TV and get her texts on her phone, I just am too burned out with it to jump through hoops anymore. BUT I am thinking through how to set things up for ourselves in our old age. How to simplify.

                              karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                              karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                              karlauerbach@sfba.social
                              wrote last edited by
                              #42

                              @nomdeb I have similar issues with my mother at a living facility. She regularly destroys the software or hardware of her devices by pushing every button (sometimes at the same time) and pounding on things as if she were on a chain gang breaking rocks.

                              Most recently she bricked, somehow, her iPhone to the degree that it had to be replaced by a new one. (Fortunately I had set it up to back up pretty much everything important to Apple's iCloud - I trust Apple with things far more than I would were it an Android phone and Google.)

                              nomdeb@mstdn.socialN 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • ghostonthehalfshell@masto.aiG ghostonthehalfshell@masto.ai

                                @karlauerbach @rodneylives @Bodling

                                That means that grain is going to get more expensive for the simple reason that it will probably have to travel around the tip of South America.

                                It’s a real pile of drought in America’s bread basket plus fertilizer constraints at a bad time, plus extreme weather.

                                Building a supply chain with no tolerance to it. It’s kind of a problem.

                                2/2

                                karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                karlauerbach@sfba.social
                                wrote last edited by
                                #43

                                @GhostOnTheHalfShell @rodneylives @Bodling I've heard about the Panama drought problem. But you are right that it is under-reported.

                                Back during the first trump term China realized that the US has become an unreliable supplier of grain, particularly soy.

                                So China made investments in grain growing countries, such as Argentina, to create solid product-moving infrastructure, such as good roads, good railroads, and deepwater docking facilities - thus greatly reducing the shipping costs and thus effectively permanently putting US growers at a net price disadvantage vis-a-vis non US growers of soy.

                                China clearly has strategic long term thinkers and investors, something the US seems to have depleted.

                                hyc@mastodon.socialH 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • karlauerbach@sfba.socialK karlauerbach@sfba.social

                                  @ShadSterling Passkeys are somewhat clever. They use the ability of public/private crypto keys to perform an identity challenge that is unique every time it is used. The private key is stored on your machine(s) and the matching public key is on the website/service. A biometric is usually used to allow the private key to be taken from its storage (which could be a protected, trusted bit of hardware, or not) and a random challenge is sent to the website. That website has to unwrap that challenge using the public key and return the challenge (or a digest of it) back to the client and who can check whether the unwrapped challenge is correct. As with most things cryptographic, there are many devils lurking in the details and there are vulnerabilities in unexpected places - such as in public key systems one has to take care not to accept a bogus "public" key.

                                  Update: I made some errors, particularly with regard to who issues the challenge and how it is processed.

                                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                                  shadsterling@mastodon.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #44

                                  @karlauerbach that’s about how passkeys work, not how to use them

                                  karlauerbach@sfba.socialK 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • karlauerbach@sfba.socialK karlauerbach@sfba.social

                                    @nomdeb I have similar issues with my mother at a living facility. She regularly destroys the software or hardware of her devices by pushing every button (sometimes at the same time) and pounding on things as if she were on a chain gang breaking rocks.

                                    Most recently she bricked, somehow, her iPhone to the degree that it had to be replaced by a new one. (Fortunately I had set it up to back up pretty much everything important to Apple's iCloud - I trust Apple with things far more than I would were it an Android phone and Google.)

                                    nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                                    nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                                    nomdeb@mstdn.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #45

                                    @karlauerbach YES!!!!!! Said with feeling. So much feeling. Exactly this. She also refuses any efforts I make to get her occupational therapist help to teach her stuff that she uses frequently like the TV remote control. Or learn to use voice controls. All the deep sighs. I did lol to see a book titled stupid things my parents did that I will avoid. 😂 but more seriously I am planning as best as I can to keep up with tech that will help in my own old age and try for simplicity.

                                    nomdeb@mstdn.socialN 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • cavyherd@wandering.shopC cavyherd@wandering.shop

                                      @karlauerbach

                                      That's...a thing I worry about. I've started to see "Set up a passkey" as a default page I have to click past. The first time, I nearly started to set it up, but then had a think based on some mutterings I'd heard On Here.

                                      I'm and Old, & a Luddite, & very much •dis•inclined to jump on the latest fad, so I have not set up any passkeys. Sounds like I very much don't want to.

                                      karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                      karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                      karlauerbach@sfba.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #46

                                      @cavyherd Do consider setting up passkeys. They are a great improvement over passwords and one usually does not forget to carry one's biometrics wherever one might choose to go. Often setting up a passkey is so painless that one might not even notice that it was done. (It is annoying on my Mac Mini because that machine does not have Apple's fingerprint button, so I usually set up passkeys on my other Apple devices and let them be [hopefully securely] propagated via Apple's iCloud sharing.)

                                      One of the weakness of passkey is that you usually need a computer/phone onto which the private key part of the desired passcode has been propagated - so you usually need your smart phone or laptop, you can't expect to be able to walk up to an arbitrary computer, while wearing nothing but your birthday suit, and securely log in. With passwords you could do that - although I rarely see a naked person doing banking.

                                      hakfoo@mstdn.partyH cavyherd@wandering.shopC 2 Replies Last reply
                                      0
                                      • nomdeb@mstdn.socialN nomdeb@mstdn.social

                                        @karlauerbach YES!!!!!! Said with feeling. So much feeling. Exactly this. She also refuses any efforts I make to get her occupational therapist help to teach her stuff that she uses frequently like the TV remote control. Or learn to use voice controls. All the deep sighs. I did lol to see a book titled stupid things my parents did that I will avoid. 😂 but more seriously I am planning as best as I can to keep up with tech that will help in my own old age and try for simplicity.

                                        nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        nomdeb@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        nomdeb@mstdn.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #47

                                        @karlauerbach truly there should be a whole career field of tech for geriatrics including building it into assisted living facilities (or homes) and training people for hire who can be called out. Assisted living IT person is just a hook up the TV sort.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • crystalmoon@chaos.socialC crystalmoon@chaos.social

                                          @karlauerbach which for transfers is OK, but for paying a bill and setting money aside? ugh

                                          karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                          karlauerbach@sfba.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                          karlauerbach@sfba.social
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #48

                                          @crystalmoon I live in the Apple world, so for most bank transactions, or paying bills, or even buying something at a store, I find that the most I need is my face (for facial recognition biometric) or my finger (for fingerprint biometric).

                                          My banks seem to have some sort of size/dollar threshold that triggers the use of a time-based authenticator, like an RSA widget or Google Authenticator app. Because we own a business we usually have to do that when dealing with our business accounts.

                                          crystalmoon@chaos.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
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