YubiKey-Guide
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YubiKey-Guide
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Can I use Security Key C NFC as backup for 5C NFC if I use OpenPGP?
Instead, most people generate keypair(s) on an airgapped machine and write them to two Yubikeys. Or write subkeys to a single Yubikey and keep a backup in encrypted form. See https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide
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Ask HN: Why does YubiCo need my private key?
I'd recommend using the Yubikey as a GPG smartcard[1]. The private key stays on the Yubikey. I also use it for ssh. But make sure you have a backup key or two, just in case the primary Yubikey gives out. FIDO2 and all other regular Yubikey functionality still works with it.
[1]: https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide
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An Opinionated Yubikey Set-Up Guide
The excellent guide by drduh should be mentioned here: https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide — I've been using this approach for years to store my OpenPGP keys on Yubikeys and use them for SSH.
I don't generate my keys on devices. That lets me be flexible and keep backups, as well as use the same keys on multiple physical devices. Using a single yubikey is a bad idea, as you're bound to eventually lose it or break it. Hasn't happened to me yet in 5 years, but I expect it to happen.
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How to use Yubikey to login into a server
I followed this guide to generate a master key and three subkey.
- Guide to Using Yubikey for GPG and SSH
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GnuPG Private Key storage on YubiKey: Why are the private keys still present in my .gnupg/ folder?
See https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide . Also google for OpenPGP card specifications, they will answer your question
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Got myself Yubikey and set it up for my password manager and email. What next?
Regarding GPG/SSH keys, there is a great howto: https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide
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Some guidance from those who use their Yubikey to protect their SSH connections.
I'd be lying if I said I understood all of that. I'm definitely going to do some research ahaha. Someone else on this post sentence this like which they said was very good guide. https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide
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When it comes to storing PGP keys what is the difference between a YubiKey and a standard USB key
When storing the key on a Yubikey, however, all you need is just the PIN in order to use the key. It can contain numbers, letters, symbols, etc. and can be quite long, so you can treat it as a passphrase for all intents and purposes. There are actually two PIN codes: one regular one, for a read access, and another administrative one, for write access for when you want to modify the gpg applet settings or the key on the Yubikey. There is also a limit to how many times in a row you can enter pins incorrectly, after which the gpg applet gets locked and the only thing you can do is reset it, erasing the PGP keys. See https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide for more information.
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Issues moving OpenPGP encryption & authentication keys to YubiKey 5C
Try follow this guide from DrDuh https://github.com/drduh/YubiKey-Guide/blob/master/README.md
solo1
- Thetis, Yubikey, Solokey, Nitrokey, Onlykey, etc. Differences and Compatability?
- Yubico is merging with ACQ Bure and intends to go public
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alternative to yubikey with requirements?
Try Solokeys https://solokeys.com v2 is open source USB-C and NFC compatible work with FIDO and web Auth.
- How to Yubikey: A Configuration Cheatsheet
- GitHub Mandates 2FA for All Developers
- The Blue Is Gone
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On using bitwarden for TOTP:
Also take a look at solokeys. They are very affordable and support FIDO2 and FIDO U2F -- meaning they have overlapping protocols with Bitwarden, and they certainly work on Google.
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Wanting to setup a luks USB key system
Try This
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Sign in with Google has been removed for your privacy
You might want to check out https://solokeys.com/ then. They're pretty new (shipping for about a year) but they do full FOSS firmware & software as well as most hardware being FOSS as well.
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Security keys opinion
yubikey is always recommend but solokey is open source
What are some alternatives?
wsl2-ssh-pageant - bridge between windows pageant and wsl2
KeePass2.x - unofficial mirror of KeePass2.x source code
sops - Simple and flexible tool for managing secrets
mortar - Framework to join Linux's physical security bricks.
wsl-ssh-pageant - A Pageant -> TCP bridge for use with WSL, allowing for Pageant to be used as an ssh-ageant within the WSL environment.
OpenSK - OpenSK is an open-source implementation for security keys written in Rust that supports both FIDO U2F and FIDO2 standards.
secretive - Store SSH keys in the Secure Enclave
trezor-hardware - :wrench: Hardware design of Trezor
IsoApplet - A Java Card PKI Applet aiming to be ISO 7816 compliant
yubioath-desktop - Yubico Authenticator for Desktop (Windows, macOS and Linux) and Android [Moved to: https://github.com/Yubico/yubioath-flutter]
naive-hashcat - Crack password hashes without the fuss :cat2:
nrf52-u2f - An Open-Source FIDO U2F implementation on nRF52 SoC