Event JSON
{
"id": "bccc743a6fb77341e5a74dc396d99e1b7187f39b96b2498f437a78e6ae6e079a",
"pubkey": "082b5c0bfa04cddbe47b72b1907b8b8489d3b65e8c7992afcf3cd70b5bb50efc",
"created_at": 1715946578,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"proxy",
"https://mastodon.green/@christineburns/112456274976461685",
"web"
],
[
"e",
"3131b0342fecdf13bd86e3d0aa4c7e30a7cfe227a214dc0884749105dc1e0c28",
"",
"root"
],
[
"e",
"7485de9e3be0014364ba310da2d03c9dd2d2054ed0b1e16b059dc44aab997f0b",
"",
"reply"
],
[
"p",
"082b5c0bfa04cddbe47b72b1907b8b8489d3b65e8c7992afcf3cd70b5bb50efc"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://mastodon.green/users/christineburns/statuses/112456274976461685",
"activitypub"
],
[
"L",
"pink.momostr"
],
[
"l",
"pink.momostr.activitypub:https://mastodon.green/users/christineburns/statuses/112456274976461685",
"pink.momostr"
]
],
"content": "OK… An update. I swiftly determined that authenticator apps like Microsoft Authenticator want to take over and manage all your login credentials, which apple’s Passwords/Keychain feature does far more securely and across devices, so I wasn’t having any of that nonsense. So then I went looking to see whether Apple had implemented an authenticator in Apple Passwords. Turns out it does. So then to set it up PatientAccess displayed a QR code which it wanted me to point the camera of my iPhone at, ..",
"sig": "c0fe6aff1d2eb45b66a16dee846226826d1e228cc933addc378bf7beb33daf97e27dca3adb6c29edded1031bd6364c43de19f604952f42498b8e7b3628c1157d"
}