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Reddit mentions of Yubico - YubiKey 4 - USB-A, Two-Factor Authentication

Sentiment score: 0
Reddit mentions: 8

We found 8 Reddit mentions of Yubico - YubiKey 4 - USB-A, Two-Factor Authentication. Here are the top ones.

Yubico - YubiKey 4 - USB-A, Two-Factor Authentication
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The YubiKey 4 has been upgraded and replaced with the YubiKey 5 NFC.View the YubiKey 5 NFC at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07HBD71HLSearch “YubiKey 5 NFC” in the Amazon search bar.
Specs:
Height1.7716535415 Inches
Length0.7086614166 Inches
Weight0.00661386786 Pounds
Width0.1181102361 Inches

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Found 8 comments on Yubico - YubiKey 4 - USB-A, Two-Factor Authentication:

u/gerbs · 4 pointsr/Wordpress

This isn't correct. Header tags denote structure of a document, not structure of a page or content priority. Your h1 tag should provide the context for further content, not context on the larger site. That's what other elements and navigation menus/TOC are for.

Take for example Amazon.com. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B018Y1Q71M Which one is the h1 tag? The product title. There are two reasons:

  1. Crawlers know what website they're on. But once they're there, they need to figure out the page they're on and the content and context. So they look for the headers. The h1 tells them "What is the main topic of this content?" When you're on that page, what is the main topic: The Yubikey item.

    Your h1 declares the heading of the content: The topmost subject. And then it's broken down further. Otherwise you would be redeclaring the subject on every single page, which is unnecessary. If the title of the site is "Dogs", then you don't need to tell Google on every page that this website is about dogs.

    dogs.website/breeds

  • Dogs
    • Breeds
      • Golden Retriever
        • Hair
        • Teeth
      • Rottweiler
        • Hair
        • Teeth

          It would be more like:

          Title: Dogs

  • Breeds
    • Golden Retriever
      • Hair
      • Teeth
    • Rottweiler
      • Hair
      • Teeth

  1. Correctly using headings to describe content improves page accessibility. If you're using using the h1 as your site title, then you should switch to Title meta tags and <header> tags instead of headings.

    > Headings add structure and meaning to pages by labeling each content part and indicating the relative importance of those parts.
    >
    > Assistive technologies and some browsers provide mechanisms to present a list of headings to the user that allows users to jump to individual headings. Headings also provide visual clues that help to skim the page or find a specific section, this is especially useful for people that are easily distracted.
    >
    > https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/page-structure/headings/

    If they land on your web page, chances are they already know where they are. If someone landed on dogs.website/breeds, the first thing they wouldn't want to filter through would be "breeds", not "dogs". They know they're looking at a website about dogs, but they're on a page about breeds.

    Edit: To further elaborate, there is no issue with multiple h1 tags, but only for multiple h1 tags per section, which is why you'll see multiple h1's on the page. The latest recommendation has no issue with multiple h1's on page, but does with multiple h1's in a section element. https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/sections.html WCAG advises it for accessibility, because of the way that screen readers will parse a page.

    Remember that first and foremost, HTML is a markup language. You're marking up the structure of a document. If you're not using other elements, like sections, article, header, footer, etc., then your headers are "sectioners" of your outline. Using <section> and <article> elements does the breaking apart of content on behalf of the headers. The second level heading is a subheading of h1 in the same way a <section> element is the section level of a top-level <section> because it's nested inside of it.

u/AnonymousRev · 4 pointsr/Bitcoin

use two factor on every account you own. ALL. if you have a service that doesn't accept two factor close it.

DONT store two factor tokens on your cell! that is the biggest attack vector most people expose themselves too.

https://www.amazon.com/Yubico-Y-158-YubiKey-4/dp/B018Y1Q71M

Hardware isolation.

>naked pictures of me that he would post online.

just fyi no one cares, tell him to fuck off.

u/gaz2600 · 3 pointsr/techsupport

Get a yubi key and ditch 2FA :)

u/preludeoflight · 2 pointsr/IAmA

I suppose that depends on the level of threat you expect to defend against. Personally, (as a casual person with no high-profile need what-so-ever,) I just have mine on my desktop, with a backup on a usb drive. Software like gpg stores it in an encrypted form that requires the password to do anything with the private key portion (eg: signing, decrypting.)

There are also hardware solutions for storing and using your keys: things like the YubiKey or Nitrokey, as well as smart cards allow you to store the keys on physical hardware.

There's also lots of clever offline backup solutions, like storing your key in a QR code, or in a method known as 'paper keys', that allow you to basically print the secret portion and recreate your full key later should you lose it. (Obviously, solutions like this aren't practical for daily use, but they're important and interesting none the less!)