On Tue, Jun 25, 2024 at 10:32 AM Vitaly Zaitsev via devel
<devel@lists.fedoraproject.org> wrote:
>
> On 25/06/2024 15:06, Stephen Gallagher wrote:
> > I am not a lawyer, but I would assume that if Fedora offered to
> > provide such a token, it would be reviewed by Legal and provide some
> > form of legally-binding assertion that we weren't sending out
> > malicious devices.
>
> Who can guarantee that these devices were not replaced during delivery?
>
> > In that situation, the
> > provenpackagers would be making a three way decision: 1) Stop being a
> > provenpackager, 2) buy their own token or 3) accept one provided by
> > Fedora.
>
> 4. Allow classic OTP codes.
>
> I would prefer this one since I can use open source applications to
> generate these codes. I can't find any FIDO2 implementations that are
> completely open source which doesn't require proprietary technologies
> like TPM or SGX. Relying on a black box is not an option for me.
>

No one said otherwise. This hypothetical started from "what if we
required physical tokens?", so I was noting the possibilities under
that restriction.
--
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