this post was submitted on 11 Nov 2025
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Passkeys are built on the FIDO2 standard (CTAP2 + WebAuthn standards). They remove the shared secret, stop phishing at the source, and make credential-stuffing useless.

But adoption is still low, and interoperability between Apple, Google, and Microsoft isn’t seamless.

I broke down how passkeys work, their strengths, and what’s still missing

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[–] l_b_i@pawb.social -4 points 3 days ago (1 children)

The flow I hear about when people talk about passkeys is sign up with email. Code gets sent to email. Code is entered, passkey gets generated. There always seems to be some similar step that looks like that, and often you have new device or reset that looks the same. Sure the passkey itself is secure, but how do you get it, how do you generate it, how do you validate the first time?

[–] EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world 14 points 3 days ago (1 children)

None of that is remotely true lol. You don’t get a passkey, you generate. Nothing is “sent” to you at any point in time, it has nothing to do with email.

[–] Sxan@piefed.zip 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Instead of saying how it doesn't work, it'd be more constructive to explain how it does.

[–] egrets@lemmy.world 11 points 3 days ago

Seems a little redundant when the article we're all commenting on does precisely that.

[–] EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world 6 points 3 days ago

You mean like… the article you’re commenting on does?