Even if we assume that you're ok with connecting discrete and disparate devices together (and you always have your personal tracking device near you all the time), Bluetooth is basically comprised of a giant bag of vulnerabilities and weaknesses.
> Even if we assume that you're ok with connecting discrete and disparate devices together (and you always have your personal tracking device near you all the time)
This is a solution for the masses. If you're not comfortable with it, nobody is forcing you to use it, and it certainly doesn’t diminish the value passkeys provide over traditional passwords and OTPs for the vast majority of people.
> Bluetooth is basically comprised of a giant bag of vulnerabilities and weaknesses.
That doesn’t really matter. The whole point of passkeys is their cryptographic primitives make snooping on the handshake pointless. Everything is E2E between the passkey provider, and the site you’re authenticating against. There’s no dependency on Bluetooths security to ensure that the actual passkey handshake is secure.
> > take 30 seconds to complete
> also, ouch.
That includes the time taken to fish my phone out of my pocket.
> take 30 seconds to complete
also, ouch.