Hey everyone, still on the iOS train for the time being, and want to enable 2FA for my Lemmy account. Currently the way this is done, it gives a link and that link default opens in Keychain, however I want to add the token to 2FAS. Anyone know how to do this?

  • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I’ll just warn you that if you use Apple’s keychain, you are vulnerable to all of the various zero-click zero-day nonsense that’s been in the news. Like, obv you’re unlikely to be specifically targeted but when you use Apple stock stuff, you’re vulnerable to all that. Its becoming more likely that this is intentional as a backdoor to all the other protections that get touted.

    Orher password managers allow for the possibillity of keyfiles and 2FA so I would reevaluate if you can. You are not “safe” and at some point one of these hacks are going to hit mainstream à la Lastpass and I just want to make sure you’re pre-warned.

    At the very least, get your ass on Lockdown mode since it invalidates these attacks, for the most part and as far as we know. Also disable iMessage and Facetime if possible

    • alcyoneous@midwest.social
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      10 months ago

      Any source for it as a back door? I hadn’t heard anything about that nor did a quick internet search turn up anything.

      • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        That’s technically conjecture but iMessage and WebKit and iCloud Calendar have had zero-day after zero-day zero-click exploits because they don’t sandbox properly. And when it gets exploited , it goes to the very root of your phone. Its gets them everything as opposed to 3rd party messengers like Signal or Whatsapp that are limited to their own secured sandbox

        This has happened over and over again and iMessage is often the common denominator, as it was most recently. At a certain point, you have to wonder if something thats turned on by default (opt-out) that uses your number and where you can’t block unknown numbers from sending you shit isnt that backdoor that was requested years ago and likely persistently even now. Also your messages are likely full readable by Apple since iCloudBackup helpfully includes a key alongside it for easy decryption