

The Nazi gold is still very much a thing.
The Nazi gold was given back. It’s very much not a thing anymore. And back to the jews I mean, not Germany.
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The Nazi gold is still very much a thing.
The Nazi gold was given back. It’s very much not a thing anymore. And back to the jews I mean, not Germany.
This only applies though if it’s a per-device passkey that uses a private key stored securely that cannot be exported.
If the private key can be exported, it can be stolen and the factors becomes invalid.
But people also store their private key in cloud solutions (some here mentioned doing that) which just makes the factor invalid anyway, since then it’s not device-bound anymore, and it’s the device that verifies your identity with those methods.
Like, what if someone hacks the cloud service storing the passkeys and steals them? Not really any different from storing passwords in a cloud, and that one isn’t called 2FA either.


Does this even make any difference outside of Switzerland (were pirating for personal use is actually legal)?
Can you name examples?
We did always implement all the EU sanctions afaik.
In case you meant us not using Russian assets to help Ukraine like the EU does, iirc they’re using interest, not the actual assets, for that. Which I remember reading (but don’t have a source right now) isn’t possible for Switzerland due to how they are stored in commercial banks rather than central repositories. And just seizing them would be illegal. It’s not like we don’t want to (though that’s probably a factor too), but more like we can’t.