mplorentz on Nostr: Passkey update: Bitwarden, Firefox, and Safari all seem to play nicely together now ...
Passkey update: Bitwarden, Firefox, and Safari all seem to play nicely together now when it comes to passkeys. I’ve been creating and saving passkeys into Bitwarden whenever a site prompts me to set one up. Signing in with them works how I would expect. It’s not really a different UX from signing in with a username and password using a password manager.
And I think I’m defeating the purpose of passkeys by storing them in a central vault, but hey if websites won’t log me out or ask for 2FA so often that’s a trade I will happily make. The accounts I really need secured get the Yubikey.
Published at
2025-04-17 21:51:56Event JSON
{
"id": "77bc657e79f8b35a903acd069a303d32ce3d783f6655ae62787893e55a06ae7a",
"pubkey": "d0a1ffb8761b974cec4a3be8cbcb2e96a7090dcf465ffeac839aa4ca20c9a59e",
"created_at": 1744926716,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [],
"content": "Passkey update: Bitwarden, Firefox, and Safari all seem to play nicely together now when it comes to passkeys. I’ve been creating and saving passkeys into Bitwarden whenever a site prompts me to set one up. Signing in with them works how I would expect. It’s not really a different UX from signing in with a username and password using a password manager.\n\nAnd I think I’m defeating the purpose of passkeys by storing them in a central vault, but hey if websites won’t log me out or ask for 2FA so often that’s a trade I will happily make. The accounts I really need secured get the Yubikey.",
"sig": "2948c8d0ec9ea4e58073c21307927ff69de9e8c7b460e212eaf287347631fb25b8f0d6a9a2e8839acbfd0ab75aafe5f9e94daebfe5d4f8f0c53fc761a566c4e7"
}