Passkeys: Are they a solution to end passwords forever? | BBC News
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- Опубликовано: 29 окт 2024
- Passkeys are being called the future of how we stay safe online, with major online businesses hoping the new technology will put an end to passwords.
The no-password solution uses biometrics or device pins to protect our accounts online using encryption.
It means that the future of logging in online will increasingly require thumbprints, PIN codes and facial ID.
This video is from BBC Click, the BBC’s flagship technology programme.
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#Passkey #Technology #BBCNews
I like how you at no moment explained what a "passkey" is in technical terms or what advantages it has over other forms of authentication. I rather have an uncomfortably hard to remember password I have to take 5 min to input but guarantees everything behind it is secure than a third party one button lock I have no control over while the third party keeps saying 'trust me bro' with no explanation.
If you only have one password that you use for everything, then you are already completely compromised. How's your bank account looking today? 🫏
Basically just an SSH key, the same thing used in the tech industry and to control bitcoin accounts.
It's a long secret code, combined with cryptographic techniques that produce authentication codes that prove that you are the key owner without sharing the original secret code.
It will be stored on your phone, with the auth code sent to a website, after you verify your identity on your phone with a finger print or facial recognition.
They can miss me with their passkeys. I'm with @DSMikeNW, I'd rather have a password that nobody can guess & update it every 90 days as I have to do for for online banking.
@@robertsandiford6223 do you seriously think the average joe will understand what a ssh key is and public private crypto?
I still don't know what a passkey is, how to get it, how to set it up. 🤷🏼
You can start using it on a few websites, like Google, using certain password managers.
The cheapest being Google Chrome's password manager, which is obviously free.
There's also 1password, which lets you do that, and they have a beta program where the manager itself does not use a master password, but that _itself_ uses a passkey.
Which is the end goal. To only have a passkey and no password whatsoever.
Google still requires a password even if you set it up with a passkey - for the time being
What about companies protecting our information? We don’t go a month without getting notified that 6 months ago some where we have an account had their accounts hacked and our personal information was accessed.
That's kind of the point of the passkey. No chance of passwords being stored as plain text or even encrypted databases being broken into. Take that part of the equation out of the hands of the companies and it should in theory be harder to have your accounts hacked.
@@Jmcinally94 no, now various companies will also have access to biometric and identification data as well as passwords. It's infinitely worse, especially if you don't want your personal info dispersed all over the Internet.
Passkeys aren't quite the silver bullet they seem to be. AI and d-bag hackers will always be a major threat to your personal and work accounts.
The best defence is constant vigilance and not rushing. Always take your time and think about moments when you're prompted for a login, even if it seems completely normal.
There was a criminal who had 3mil pounds in bitcoin, hid the passkey in a fishing rod.
He got locked up for something.. lost his apartment cos he didnt pay rent, landlord threw his stuff on the landfill... Police went immediatly out to find it cos he freaked out and told them. ... Funnily enough they couldnt (right 👍).
Passkeys actually are immuned to fishing and other social engineering attacks, since they are based on a cryptographic challenge response operation with no direct input from the user. No secret is shared.
If you don't have a passkey, you could use a password manager with auto fill in. Since auto fill in is based on the URL, it's also immune to fishing attacks for the most parts.
This is a truly horrible report. It fails to explain how these passkeys are stored on the device (or password manager) and accessed through biometrics. Rather than suggesting that biometrics data will be uploaded to online services. The reporter probably had no idea what he was talking about.
This is bbc propaganda. Theres nothing useful in here
You can check google video, clearer explanation
Passkeys have existed for over 20 YEARS for 2-factor authentication. Why are they acting as if they’re new? This is idiotic.
My fingerprint? No thanks.
Our Grandparents never used passwords, passkeys or any internet. But they looked like they had lived better than us 😂.
Certainly a more simple straightforward world. It still largely existed up until about the mid 1990s.
@@paul7TM Making all phones wireless is one blackout away from a Lawsuit, We're going backwards.
Agreed. They also grew organic/normal fruit and veg and foraged locally. Data collection and sales is one of the fastest growing new industries. Our lives are monitored, manipulated and recorded for the use of corporations. Security should be enabled at the source not forced upon the user. 1984 on steroids - Corporatocracy here we come..
No, they didn't live better.
@@steveparker8065 Corporatocracy + Idiocracy = Idiocorporatocracy, I thank you.
What if a criminal just forces my hand to put the fingerprint or turns my faces forcefully to gain access. Password would buy sometime atleast...
The safest way to protect your personal information is to stop posting it everywhere on social media platforms, stop advertising your entire life to everyone on the planet, that way they can't use the information against you, they can only use what you choose to give away.
yeah we would have to keep it low profile and not share everything, the money made from our data informations all go to someone else's pockets anyways...
I think the best idea would be to have a completely offline device to store our passwords, no internet access at all on it and change often the main password to the base... I have found one who does the job for me since many years now...no I will not share its name lol
100% of the world population are gonna be introverts when that hppens.
Theres been a switch from people delicately selecting services to a united giving up on it. Now people just give whatever data.
I blame winamp😂
Not enough! must be use hard password like "+new%2&pass+88/2(word)"
THIS. Be smart about it. Use an alias instead of real name. Use a burner e-mail instead of your personal / work e-mail. Use virtual phone numbers like Google Voice and VOIP. When you sign up for a new thing, don't click that button that uses your Google or Social Media account to sign in.
Because the "user agreement" and "accept cookies" button you click on means they get to do whatever they want with your personal info.
Passwords may not be ideal, but biometrics data is worse and it's huge violation of personal privacy. Sadly, so many people are foolish enough to willfully give theirs up.
Passkeys don't require biometrics. You can use passkeys with PIN, password, security key, or whatever you use to unlock your device or password manager.
There's absolutely no dependency between biometrics and passkeys. Bigjoegamer already pointed that out. It's just a convenient and still secure way of unlocking the vault where your passkeys are stored. You're not handing over the biometrics to google or apple. And you're not forced to use them either. If you want to type a really complex password every time you unlock your passkeys, then you may do so. (but it would be a real pain in the butt) The fact is that any of your passwords will never come near the complexity level of the cryptographic key in a passkey.
@@bigjoegamer Yes, you can. But using the PIN or password that unlocks your device to unlock every single account you own is NOT secure. Accounts require unique passwords for a reason. If you think relying on a single PIN to secure everything, you're naive at best.
@@StijnHommes you can instead use a different password or device for your password manager that stores your passkeys. That way your password manager is the only thing you can unlock with that password or device.
Weak passwords mean that when a criminal identifies a user who uses weak passwords with minor variations, they can get everything. Passkeys mean that a criminal can pick and choose whose fingerprint and face to simulate, meaning everyone is at risk - you are effectively using the exact same password for everything, and while your fingerprint might require some ingenuity to obtain, there are plenty of things that you touch.
False
@@BeardedDragonMan1997why?
You don't have to use biometrics if you don't want to and still use passkeys. They're not dependent on each other. Everyone needs to do their individual risk assessment. It takes some serious knowledge and resources to do what you describe. It's not going to be the average criminal who does that.
@@senchaholic What sort of passkey would you propose?
The average criminal can do all that now, it just most likely won't work because people don't use passkeys to protect their data. But in a world where everyone uses it, it would work often enough to do so.
I still don't know how it works and that's a direct reflection on this confusing video. Too much fluff. I quit halfway through and gave it a thumb down.
i prefer the physical security keys.
Looks like password is bad because some users are not careful about selecting password according to this report? How is passcode any better if it's face, hand or some biofeature that is unchangeable but is liable to theft as well? You can change password when it is stolen. What can you do when passcode that encodes your unchangeable body feature is stolen? Change your body? Passcode also has huge privacy issue too because it is obviously forcing users to provide bio features that should be given options to stay private. Anyway, tech companies are forcing people to give up privacy bit by bit until customers can't even have a say about their own bio features and most people just comply without blinking their eyes.
The short answer: Passcodes/passkeys/biometrics aren't better or more secure.
The long answer: They really aren't.
-> Stick to passwords, the longer the better.
@@coondog7934 I asked someone who works in govt level security, his advice was a password with over 50 characters - doesn't even need special characters though you can add them if you like - and you are unlikely to be hacked (something to do with the length of time it takes a programme to hack longer passwords). Mine tend to be around 80 characters and since I changed I've not been hacked. My biggest problem is the sites that specify you can only use between 8-15 characters, very difficult to make a secure password with so few characters no matter how many ''special'' characters you use.
4:25 that face-swap is incredible!
It's just a constant game of cat and mouse. It will never end.
Eventually, and at the rate things are progressing probably quite soon, our current encryption standards (2048-bit) will be childsplay to a supercomputer, they'll be able to brute force it like a common, non-complex password. We'll then have to upgrade our encryption standards and everything will be secure for a while, as brute-forcing these will again take the computers/software millenia. But the cycle will continue, indefinitely. There is no end.
Nice Ed Sheeran cameos at the end. Lol
Still sounds difficult. My retina’s have been scanned by Google. Is that where we are headed?
Nope thats temporary.
This will lead to us all having an encrypted id code.
Then we'll get tired of lifting things and get the finger/thumb chips. (Government wanted us to use these decades ago).
Then it skips the thumb bit and using hands and we get the brainwave reading chips.
Better id (temporarily) and easier because you can control what happens with a thought (until your wave patterns get cloned).
Meta is waiting like a black mirror episode.
@@luminousfractal420 I’m feeling better all the time! Haha
No, this is completely different, the report is just bad
You can use PIN, password, security key, or whatever you use to unlock your device or password manager. It doesn't have to be biometrics.
Theve been able to identify a user using the biorythm of the heartbeat of whoever is holding the phone since iphone 4 or 5 (its in the patent, cell phone vibration sensors are highly accurate by default).
All other "i.d." they said we need since hasnt actually been needed, its just data collection. Iris, face, print, 3d area scans...all of it.
This is just one more step towards embeded chips in the body.
Many years later on for Facebook , my pass was "David Cameron" , "Abercrombie" ( a horse s nsme on France 1993 ) , "Ballinamallard" , and "Charlles de Gaulles" , etc .... 🙂👋
And for those who don't have or can't use mobile phones? Mobiles aren't free either. For many reasons....
I've only been using the internet for about 40 years and have a few thousand passwords and have never had a system compromised. Whilst passkey all sounds egalitarian, it's actually a finite land grab, and you'll be paying subscription fees for this for the rest of your life. And they are patient, it might take them ten years to start you on that subscription. And a bio device hack will compromise everything simultaneously. Unlike a password exposure that will only effect the one system you use it on. Make sure you never loose total control of your credentials, and beware of horses bearing gifts. Good luck.
Rob stark explaining pass keys now
I hope they thought of everything. Passwords are less safe but have the slight advantage of being well understood.
Passwords are only less safe if you don't use proper password hygiene. Otherwise, you have a unique password for every single account. Passkeys would have you rely on just ONE.
Passwords ARE safe. A lot more than the 2 factor authentication. Those are the easy ones to crack. I can get a password that it would take a computer 300 thousand years to crack. Passwords are not the problem, people choosing weak ones are. This is yet another tactic for you to forego your own security like we do with money (in banks).
300,000 years to crack, 1 second to keylog.
attacks on authentication don't solely consists of pure brute force attacks. it doesn't matter if a computer can't guess your password, there are attacks like rainbow tables and credential stuffing which are far cheaper and more effective then just a traditional brute force attacks. there are even tools that can guess permutations of a password or what your password may be based on details of your everyday life.
Wasn’t any trouble when you had to use cash, and get it from the bank. Spent a lot less but back then we were a nation of producers not consumers!! Now we work for big corp in dead end jobs just spend it all on rubbish!
Data collection and sales is one of the fastest growing new industries. Our lives are monitored, manipulated and recorded for the use of corporations. Security should be enabled at the source not forced upon the user. 1984 on steroids - Corporatocracy here we come...
Yep and digital IDs after this...
You have repeated it as last comment post 😒
@@lawrencekling8598 My comments are filtered or deleted mostly. The algorithm has a long memory and holds grudges...
My bank used to issue a little number pad thing. To verify you stick your card in, type in a number from the computer screen to the device, then enter the generated number displayed by the device on the computer to verify. I guess the passkey is that transaction implemented in software. Since my bank went to '3rd party authorisation' or whatever it is, forcing me to buy a mobile phone, I have been consistently stopped from doing basic online transactions. And they want to get away from cash when that is the only reliable technology out there?
Had a similar issue. Didn't want a phone, but my bank wouldn't let me access my account without one.
That is basically the same thing as a passkey. The service issues a "challenge" that is only possible to answer using the private key stored in your passkey.
And I suppose there are no humans that work for the PASSKEY company, that might be corrupt, except the ones testing them, and marketing them, so nobody there keeps track of any of this information, nor sees the possibility of selling the information, technology, etc, and move to Bora Bora?
There's no "passkey company". The authentication method is based on a standard called Webauthn part of the FIDO2 project. The company, any company, providing the service where you login with your passkey only has your public key. The private key never leaves your device.
Problem will be for people who suffer from skin disorders and arthritis. Alternatives should be provided.
You can use face id. Or, you can still unlock your passkeys with a long password. Or a hardware key.
Passwords aren't insecure at all. You just have to set a minimum character length. My 31 character password is not hackable, unless you use quantum computing.
If a company sets the minimum to like 15 characters (including numbers and other symbols) they are already pretty safe. No need for a passkey (which is basically a digital master key), if you lose your key (knowingly or not) everyone can use your key in the digital world (like a master password would be). Same goes for biometrics, same insecurities. Stick to the old good password, make it long and special enough and use password safes for storing them in a safe place (encrypted with a extra long master password), accessing them only when needed.
Hack doesn't just refer to bruteforce (many password guesses). There are different types of attacks and, for some of them, your long password is just as vulnerable as a short one.
Every site you use your "not hackable" password on is entirely hackable.
@@SeanCSHConsultingwhat if the website salted + hashed the password?
I was advised - by a hacking expert at govt level - to use 50 characters or more - and they don't need to be special characters either, a sentence will do - and most of my passwords are around 80 characters or more in length. I've been told (and he should know, or at least I bl00dy hope he does given his job) they are far safer than my fingerprint or facial recognition (not that I have a smart phone anyway).
@@musicandbooklover-p2o 50 or even 80 characters is a bit much imo. If brute forcing takes 50 years or 500 doesn't make a tangible difference. But what do I know 😅
Still, more is always better, no doubt here.
For passkeys to be a solution to anything, you actually need to have a real problem first, not an imagined one.
Ending passwords forever is a problem, not a solution.
What happens if you lose your phone or it breaks? Reliance on having a smartphone is a problem.
Then they'll try to convince us that we all need chips implanted in our hands. I wish this was a tinfoil hat thing but it's already quite real.
Don't have one, easy. I use a very very old Nokia - doesn't even do internet. And the few social media sites I use have very very VERY long passwords.
You write down the recovery code that unlocks your account, and put it somewhere that's safe and private. Or, you create more than one passkey, each new passkey being on a different device or in a password manager.
There has never been a secure network that can guarantee that you will be protected precisely by the service. But i agree that passkeys would be very beneficial for the future security
Do you have any suggestions on the best companies offering this service?
There isn't one. The "best" one would be open source and fully auditable. No company currently offers this.
I think I have already seen this video before, am i misremembered?
They posted something very very similar about a week ago.
They must be receiving money to do so.
The Swiftie moment 4:27
Ahhahahahahaha
What a load of bs. An intelligently forged password is nearly unbeatable, and you only need a couple. And if you say one needs distinct passwords for every website - I'd say you only got one face, so if you go for facial recognition and someone does fake your face successfully, they got access to everything. So sharing some passwords over some websites is still a better deal.
Let alone it takes several times longer to have your face scanned properly (cam to initialize, focus, you to turn your head around) than to enter 12-15 characters on the keyboard. And just make the tiniest change to your appearance, e.g. shave/grow a beard, put a scarf on outside in the winter or put on some makeup, and you get plenty false negatives and are effectively locked out of everything.
Exactly. Passwords + some form of encrpyted password management is still the way to go. That way you can easily use unique passwords for each and every website/service. The password safe remembers them all for you and applies them whenever needed.
From Password to Passkey. Expecting the next PassSafe
That would be what password managers are. I store my passwords and passkeys in a password manager.
People who are willing to mimic your face, hair, etc.. are very likely going to find a way in, just as someone can figure out how to get into a safe if they want it enough.
Are they?
Useless feature ❌ password is good for everything
No explanation relating to the headline. But hey, it was fun, with an empty coffee mug on the desk and all.
The reporter looks exactly like British Elliot Alderson.
We may go to more deeper problems
This video does not explain what 'passkeys' are! Waste of my time. And as for the concept, a 'device' is necessary. I don't have a cell phone, why do I have to live by a 'device?' Life online shouldn't become more complicated to maintain security. True security should be simple and steel-trap tight! Go for it by all means; I'm optimistically WAITING for the 'gold!'
Its a "hash" code generated from sets of data. You can generate hash codes from any set/s of data. A hash code created from a password or a hash code created from your face. The end result is still a hash code. The hash code is your password.
You're in the minority by not having a phone (if true), but you don't need a phone for passkeys, just a device that supports the required cryptography. It can even be with a PIN, using biometrics is not a requirement. I use a physical fingerprint reader with a desktop PC and it supports passkeys, the encrypted fingerprint is stored on it - not transmitted - and I've used it to log in with passkeys many times.
@@desmond-hawkins us no-phoners are a growing minority among the younger generation, and we're slowly turning away from the internet altogether due to the damaging effects we see it having on our lives. In 2021 I used no internet at all, and quality of life and productivity went through the roof.
If i were ever to leave my phone unlocked and lose it, it would not go well at all.
Not at all.
I leave mt screen time open for 5 seconds at all times.
Passwords are actually the best alternative. Not a number sequence, but a pass-word.
Its basically like trying to read someones mind. Impossible.
A number can be rooted out eventually. You could even make up a nonsense word if you wish. Very hard to figure.
How many people know the name of the pet fish I had when I was 5?
(Not that that's my password....oh no...) 😂😂😂
Any password like that can be brute forced in seconds.
@@Sean-fj9pn Lol, it's not that serious.
Fingerprint & eyeprint are unique more safe to be applied😃& impossible to be imitated or at least it is hard😉
Requires 3d scanning or else it can be faked with a good photo, and thats very invasive.
Not really. There are already tutorials on how to fake those with a 3D printer. Never go biometric unless you have to. Your finger/eyes can be copied, whats inside your head can't (yet).
Interesting development
2 stage biometrics is the way forward, requiring the latest of both facial recognition & fingerprint technologies. We also need to train AI to accurately spot fakes & traceable to the source.
You're obviously a paid propagandist. Stop talking shite.
You must have a lot of of trust in these companies if you are so easily willing to give them all this data of yourself.
A lot of trust.
Ha ha paranoid delusions, obviously someone with something to hide. @@John-ed2wj
No, both could be reproduced with the right tools and a bit of work. A password can be changed if it gets compromised, your face and finger prints can't.
This is the very worst of all the ideas.
I would rather not have to rely on a third party to verify my identity. Expecially with biometrics.
What third party are you talking about?
I watched the whole video and still don't understand exactly what a passkey is. Why couldn't you provide a clear example of one?
Think 'software dongle'.
With passkeys instead of creating a password to log into a website and having to remember it, you link a device (usually a phone) to the website and use it to log in. To create the passkey you'll use your fingerprint or FaceID on the phone, and then to log in you'll just do the same. No password to remember, and no one can fake the biometric ID you use to log in.
Safesurf!
The thumbnail lady is 😍😍
I've got over one million pass words I think .
Are people really that stupid with their passwords?? We ALWAYS use a capital letter, a special symbol and one or two numbers which have no relation to our family birthdays, oh, and never the same password on more than one account 😮🇬🇧🌈♥️👍
Why are they reposting some videos again, and again? Nice, already seen this!!
I hate memorising passwords so I’m glad to see new innovation in this space. Passwords are bad, but security questions are horrible, and it’s shocking the amount of websites still using them.
Is there any possibly for passkey theft?
GET RID OF THAT DISGUSTING NEW BRANDED LOGO
What about the small companies and hobbies to make passkey? There no way to build for websites. There will be bad people will find some loop hole for sites.
Am I the only one who saw a flash Rami Malik in him?😅
Well, just wait till they can crack the passkey. Just like drm in games, it's just matter of time
TERRIBLE idea. Once they figure out how to "spoof" the passkeys? We're ALL fucked. Now, I have dozens of passwords, so if hackers manage to find one, they don't have ALL OF THEM. If they spoof my passkey, they have access to EVERYTHING I have access to... banks, investments, social media... everything.
that's why passkeys should always be encrypted. the danger of a password is that the services you are using can be compromised. with passkeys, you are just using the key to sign a request, the key itself never leaves your device unencrypted
@@ahslanabanana ... but that device itself and the proprietary software vendor of that device will have full access to your keys.... and CSS, client side scanning, will also have access to your keys.
Passwords and now the dreaded verify code is out of control. It is tirinf
How to learn Great Britain 🇬🇧?
First you gotta master the Small Britain.
with people stealing other peoples I.D. i think we need some secure form of protection... like identifying those people...
_Before 1880 colonial possessions in Africa were relatively few and limited to coastal areas, with large sections of the coastline and almost all the interior still independent. By 1900 Africa was almost entirely divided into separate territories that were under the administration of European nations..._ *1880 was when Africa first developed separate countries...* Europeans imposed that concept upon those people...
And the African tribal kingships that divided the continent before that?
@@everTriumph
sub-Saharan africa left no history of itself... because... it never developed a system of writing...
@@everTriumph
tribes of people... is not a kingdom... a dictatorship... is a kingdom....
This is discouraging
Another example of humanity being in its technological infancy. Just find an advanced alien civilization and get some guidance.
The best way to staying safe is not to watch channels like this
whats a passkey?
Hello everyone, have a great week
Thank you, Pastor.
@@tomo_ka3040 Thank you too friend
GCHQ is going to love everyone using facial recognition and finger print scanning.
It's already got that information
I hate passkey
Absolutely not 🚫
A few years ago, my ebay UK suddenly stopped. About 900 times I got along between the UK and Osaka.
So whats a passkey?
I’m imagining that 50 year from now everything will be transformed into digital world
Think this may be the most laughable load of shine I've ever seen the news say, and that's saying something.
*if you people look at the statistics...* more and more people are going to private schools... because the educational success rate is higher....
What’s for dinner 🍽️ ❓❓❓🍷
In 1996 , as i turned 18 years old , father willed to buy a computer for me , Here , in Russia , Moscow , and after a while , i willed to Enter a pass for it , it was simple : "soldier" . 😐
any thing can be hacked now days,The amount of times Ive change my password for Facebook,Google and many other accounts,They soon get hacked in again,Even with creating very long passwords mixed up with Blocked letters normal leters and numbers and and ?/- all sorts of things still get hacked,Might as well create finger prints next as a password,These hackers still find ways around it
Do you not use 2FA?
Damn if you're getting hacked that much you must be clicking on phishing links or adding dodgy apps to your account or have some kind of spyware in your device.
You got a rat on your device.
wow amazing
A K-pop girl group without a single Korean member appears... There is no ‘K’ in K-pop
"Passkey's are the future" so is debt, war & famine
I think the most valuable data we as human beings have stored on the digital world is our financial information and our banking details.
That's probably the number one and the highest priority in our importance list, when it comes to being affected if our data was hacked and accessed by scammers.
I don't think things like social media accounts, and the information stored in social media platforms are a big concern for society, generally speaking.
That really depends on what kinds of information you store in the social media platforms. Identify theft is big business, and once they've got all that information they can often setup finance in your name without you even knowing.
I did it on Roblox
Doesn't work, won't work.
So what happens if i lose my phone?
Exactly!!
You use the recovery code that you wrote down that unlocks your password manager that stores your passkeys. And/or you create a passkey on all of your devices, so that you can log in with your other devices, even if you lose your phone.
In most cases, you'd do some form of reset of your account, using a recovery code.
The the most effective way to be secure online is not trust any one stop solution for personal security.
😍😍😍😍😍😍
I don't know why we still celebrate hackers!!
They are dumb!!
in michigan, we eat these every fat tuesday
Infrared scanners top detect heat signatures will be able to detect masks and printouts of someone's face.
Phones are starting to get infrared sensors on them now.
They've been having that for a long time. Several years.
And , years before , roughlly , around 1990 , in BeLgrade , YiuguosLavia , father brought home an electronic device , Casio , and , one evening , as i was thinking deeplly about a gerl From School class at School Vladislav Ribnikar , i willed Her name to be a pass , but , not quite obviouslly , so i wrote "Aleksandrija" ( or ALeksandria ) instead of ALeksandra ( ALeksandra Injac ) , 🙂 👋 .
Bless all you the good news rejoice Jesus Christ the son of god is returning soon. The son of man and son of god had done wonderful then like helping the sick and injured, wake on water, cast out demons, feed the many, make the bline see, and raise the dead. Believe Jesus died for your sin with his blood. Buried for three days. An on the third day rose in a glorified body we to will have in the rapture. Repent your sins or face gods wrath of the great tribulation. There be 21 wraiths and if your there in this time don’t take the mark of the beast and accept death in faith to Jesus Christ. The mark be on forehead or right hand. Jesus love and cares about you he will help you feel that hole in your heart all he ask is for you to accept him as your lord and savior and learn about him. spread the message...... pleasee.
This shit is stupid why cannot i just use smartcards
If someone steals your phone and adds their face or fingerprint to the login then they can get passed everything?? Theres always a backdoor to any phone.
They can't just steal your phone and add their face or fingerprint to the login just like that. There are several security controls in the way before you can get to that step.