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Joined 8 months ago
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Cake day: March 3rd, 2024

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  • Them being portable makes them actually useful though for me, unless there was a way to use them from a phone to login to a website on a desktop/other device.

    Being able to login into a password manager and use a passkey is great, passkeys need to become mainstream to get everyone away from passwords, but they can’t be locked locally onto one platform or you have issues. The regular joe won’t be backing them up from their iPhones or whatever.

    I don’t see why a local option wouldn’t exist though, perhaps they will come once passkeys have matured further.














  • Location isn’t that accurate, the phone was probably just traded in a car or in the street.

    So the police get a call from the phone owner “yeah my phone location is on X street”, the police get down there, then what? Let’s say it was in a house, it’s rows of houses in London, do they knock on every door there and ask “hey have you stolen a phone?” in hopes the guy admits it? It could have been traded already so a description of someone might not be good enough.

    I just read the whole article and it just re-iterates what I have just said. They recover a small amount of the phones because of how quick they move them after they have been stolen. It even says that the criminals “wrap stolen phones in tinfoil to block its signal”.

    It’s easy to sit in your chair and say “just go over there and arrest them”, without even taking a moment to understand the logistics of tackling it.