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Firefox Moves Browsers Into Post-Password Future With WebAuthn Tech (cnet.com) 132

Today, Mozilla released Firefox 60 for Windows, Mac, Linux and Android, and with it arrives Web Authentication API for desktop browsers. From a report: Firefox 60 supports technology called Web Authentication, or WebAuthn for short, that can be used to grant you access to websites with a physical authentication device like a YubiKey dongle, biometric identity proof using an Android phone's fingerprint reader or the iPhone's Face ID, and some other alternatives to passwords.

Passwords are a particular problem on the web. Fake websites can coax you to type in credentials that then can be used to steal money from your bank account or snoop your email -- a problem called phishing. Even if you pick hard-to-guess passwords, never reuse them on multiple sites and always remember them, passwords still aren't that strong a foundation for security these days. We're still a long way away from a post-password future, but WebAuthn is an important step, if nothing else, in making sites more secure.

Comment Re:F*** you (Score 1) 386

Persistent "keep unread" feature (when browsing in expanded view): being able to scroll within a topic (represented as a feed or folder) to an arbitrary entry without—on every visit—having to mark anew as unread every intermediate post of interest, or having to worry about the one month expiry date.

Comment Re:For low values of success (Score 1) 127

Strictly speaking, DVB-T defines only the transmission aspects. As such, DVB-T2 may introduce notable changes but it seems to still use the MPEG-2 transport stream and thus will likely refer to the same specifications as DVB-T. It is true that as far as codecs are concerned it was not until 2005 (publication date of ETSI TS 101 154 V1.6.1) that optional support for improved AV codecs was introduced (H.264/AVC and HE AAC, with VC-1 added in version 1.8.1). However, aside from the resulting chicken-or-egg problem, this does not preclude DVB-T stations from using the newer codecs, and some are already doing so.

I too feel that the deployment is somewhat shoddy, but the theory is that there is no need to wait for a big change because buying a new decoder is relatively inexpensive. I don't quite agree because apart from being wasteful it is consumer-unfriendly to discover that an HD TV set sold as DVB-capable doesn't support some (HD) content because of the codec (beside the fact that it might not support HD DVB-T streams at all depending on whether it is HD ready, HD TV, Full HD or whatever the current marketspeak is), and that after somehow upgrading to get over that deficiency one is bound to learn that the system still doesn't support MHP or whatever technology under the DVB umbrella gets highlighted in the following months.

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