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I’m not watching a Ben sullens video.Watch the video, it explains how this can be worked around
Thanks. I do miss the bundles they used to have.Going off-topic, but the 1Password "standalone" license is still very much available. It's what I use vs. the subscription model. In the app, when you launch, on the welcome screen, underneath the "Subscribe now" button - there's one for "Need a licence. We have those too". That'll get you a standalone license.
That's true if it is authenticating the device for future use. I was thinking that it would use 2FA for all logins even if they were on the same device as a previous login.I'm not sure that's true. It seems to me like the result of the successful man in the middle here is that the hacker's computer has now been authenticated as a valid user by 2FA and issued a token, and he should then be able to do anything the app can do until the token expires...
I VPN all WiFi connections.Another reasons I VPN on ALL wifi connections, secure or not.
People would be annoyed if 2FA was required all the time. Google/apple, etc allow 30 days. The man in the middle can always do that and get a 30day auth.That's true if it is authenticating the device for future use. I was thinking that it would use 2FA for all logins even if they were on the same device as a previous login.
Hmmm I thought in order for your phone to work as a key it had to be paired with one of the original key cards????
Sharing this video because I’d hate to have mine stolen. I was surprised to learn tesla doesn’t let you use 2 factor authentication at the minimum when I got mine. Heck Gmail, my bank, all use this. Anyway watch the vid. I know my password is randomly generated and but I’ll need to change this every month at least. My guess is to ease service maybe? Like how apple makes you remove your login when doing warranty work.
Not the unlock, start buttons, trunk, temp, etc within the app.Hmmm I thought in order for your phone to work as a key it had to be paired with one of the original key cards????
It’s also wise to enter a fake password if suspicious. A spoof site might just accept it.
Oh wow, I assumed actual access to the car would require the initial pairing with one of the car cards. If the only real security are owners being savvy with password management, there are going to be a lot of easy targets.Not the unlock, start buttons, trunk, temp, etc within the app.
The model 3 paired Bluetooth thingy - that works by proximity requires pairing.
Oh wow, I assumed actual access to the car would require the initial pairing with one of the car cards. If the only real security are owners being savvy with password management, there are going to be a lot of easy targets.
I was told the same thing. Made it seem like without an original key card, you can not use a phone to interact with the car.Our delivery specialist said a physical key card is required to pair a phone.
As far as decryption, a long phrase with misspellings is the best password. Nothing beats a lot of characters.
All else aside, I have PIN to Drive enabled in my car. Case closed. It is completely unrelated to any of my personal information. Some hacker has a 1 in 10,000 chance of guessing it. And it isn't in any email or on my computer or written down anywhere.