I bought a physical security key for that it add that very specific "physical" layer of security, to stay clear of the paranoid thinking of having a potential zero-day that would annihilate all the effort I made to stay secure, for example, by rendering the password of the (by default) 10 minutes automatic re-lock feature of my Proton Pass clear to some evil people, or the cookies of my session or whatever. I know there's multiple way to counter this statement and in extension a lot of my other fears, good (like Guy's reply) and lesser good arguments would be presented, but the fact would still remain that, I want to feel secure and I'm not 100%.
That feeling would effectively vanish if I took it the way I think fits me the best. And I right now think this is what I need.
This is the most important piece of software people rely on, I would love to get the most I can possibly get out of this.
Also, I too, feel like it really should be a basic feature but hey what do I know.
I bought a physical security key for that it add that very specific "physical" layer of security, to stay clear of the paranoid thinking of having a potential zero-day that would annihilate all the effort I made to stay secure, for example, by rendering the password of the (by default) 10 minutes automatic re-lock feature of my Proton Pass clear to some evil people, or the cookies of my session or whatever. I know there's multiple way to counter this statement and in extension a lot of my other fears, good (like Guy's reply) and lesser good arguments would be presented, but the fact would still remain that, I want to feel secure and I'm not 100%.
That feeling would effectively vanish if I took it the way I think fits me the best. And I right now think this is what I need.
This is the most important piece of software people rely on, I would love to get the most I can possibly get out of this.
Also, I too, feel like it really should be a basic feature but hey what do I know.