You understood correctly. Seems like I missed some news on the syncing front.
You understood correctly. Seems like I missed some news on the syncing front.
Do you add separate keys on every device?
If you do, how long does it take you to add a new device?
A sufficiently strong password and additional TOTP should protect you well enough.
I’m thinking of phone recovery, where you’re trying to get all your stuff back on a new device.
With a password manager, simply logging in will get you there and until passkeys can be synced automatically just like passwords this will need to be handled somehow.
Good incentive for the provider to fix it or go out of business.
QR codes are good 50% of the time; when you’re trying to log in on a pc.
The reverse case is extremely annoying
I remain hopeful. Initially, when Keypass wanted to include a simple export option there was talk of banning them from using Passkeys.
Still, it makes adding new devices much more of a hassle.
Good, certificates should be automated anyways. Much more reliable than the once yearly outages because nobody renewed the thing or forgot some systems.
They really should deliver on their promise of making a Linux client.
Never heard of that store before, but now I’ll have to try it.
Surprisingly civil Phoronix comment section
I use migadu.com now, previously also used mailbox.org and protonmail.
The great part with migadu is how much control you have. Want to add multiple domains or have multiple users? No problem. (Though they reserve the right to ask what you’re doing if it’s excessive).
Limits are based on mails sent, mails received and storage space.
I was on their cheapest plan (19$/year) until I filled my receiving contingent because my servers had issues and monitoring kept dutifully sending email alerts about that.
Both, the browsers (and any other application) can choose to ignore your DNS settings and use whatever other mechanisms they like.
Firefox has DoT enabled by default, maybe Chrome does the same. That would cover the use-case of most people on public wifi.
They can’t decrypt HTTPS unless you installed a certificate controlled by them. The only thing they can know is which domains you visited, but not what you did on it.
is more likely to be a glob, therefore an accurate version would be
*n?x
Edit: global -> glob dang autocorrect
Just recently XDG Portals to get video sharing working. It just kept using the GTK fallbacks instead of KDE as I configured it, but it used the correct ones when starting from the terminal.
Eventually I figured out I had set an env override for XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP="sway"
in my user systemd environment, because that’s what I used previously.
I’m aware of these options to do RAG, though I’m not using any yet. Only SillyTavern for chat stuff
This does not scale. I have 400 logins in my Bitwarden account right now.