Comment by simoncion
17 hours ago
It is absolutely unfair to say it. Just like passwords stored in a password manager, passkeys can be copied out of the device for safekeeping. Because you can copy them out, a user can be induced to give them to someone.
I saw passkey boosters go very, very rapidly from "Passkeys are immune to phishing!" to "Passkeys are phishing resistant!" when lots of real-world people started using passkeys and demonstrated that you absolutely must have a way to back them up and move them around.
> passkeys can be copied out of the device for safekeeping
You can't copy them out on at least the iOS, Android, and (to my knowledge) Windows default implementations.
> lots of real-world people started using passkeys and demonstrated that you absolutely must have a way to back them up and move them around.
Millions of people use them without being able to move them around in the way you describe.
> You can't copy them out on at least the iOS, Android, and (to my knowledge) Windows default implementations.
Pardon? The official support docs disagree with you [0][1][2]. They absolutely leave the device.
Other passkey managers let them leave the device in a way that you control, but even the default ones copy them off the system they were created on.
[0] <https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/6197437?hl=en&co=...>
[1] <https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/passwords-devices-iph...>
[2] Examine the "Can I use passkeys across multiple devices?" Q and its A here: <https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/passkeys-frequen...>
Yes, they're synchronized, but I wouldn't call that "copying them out", as that to me implies somehow getting access to the raw private key or root secret bytes.
Both Apple and Google have pretty elaborate ceremonies for adding a new device to an existing account in a way that synchronizes over passkeys.
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