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23andMe agrees to $30M settlement for breach lawsuit
(www.scmagazine.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
private keys, etc
That's literally just a long password that you can never recover your data from when you inevitably lose or forget it (remember we're talking about the majority of users here who do not use password managers).
there's literally zero technical reason that a user couldn't reset a private key the same as a password. after all, you just pointed out they are almost the same.
edit: if you'd like to see an example create SSH keys for your GitHub account and then reset them
That's.... Literally just a long password.
I assumed you were talking about a private key as in cryptographic private key, where your data is encrypted on the remote server and your private key is required for it to be decrypted and for you to use it.
If you just talking about something to get into an SSH key then all that is is a longer password.
not at all. are you expected to remember it? would it even be possible to memorize for most? not even close to the same thing, passwords have very low entropy which causes all their problems
A password is literally just:
A secret key or passcode meets that definition 🤦 You're most definitely on poor standing here.
A very long password that no one can remember (ie. A key) is still a password. Also are you unaware of the existence of password managers and random password generation...?