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expired Posted by august_leo • Nov 22, 2020
expired Posted by august_leo • Nov 22, 2020

Yubico: Buy Two YubiKey 5 Series Keys, Get $20 Off or Security Key NFC

$14

$27

48% off
220 Comments 74,878 Views
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Yubico has its Security Key NFC on sale for $13.50. Shipping is $4 or shipping is free with the purchase of 2 keys. Thanks august_leo

Yubico is also offering $20 Off when you purchase Two YubiKey 5 Series Keys. Shipping is free when you purchase 2 keys.

Note, savings will automatically apply at checkout.

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff
Sale is valid until November 30; 11:59 PT or while supplies last. See forum thread for additional discussion. -qwikwit

Original Post

Written by august_leo
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Yubico has its Security Key NFC on sale for $13.50. Shipping is $4 or shipping is free with the purchase of 2 keys. Thanks august_leo

Yubico is also offering $20 Off when you purchase Two YubiKey 5 Series Keys. Shipping is free when you purchase 2 keys.

Note, savings will automatically apply at checkout.

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff
Sale is valid until November 30; 11:59 PT or while supplies last. See forum thread for additional discussion. -qwikwit

Original Post

Written by august_leo

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Top Comments

For anyone who really thinks this way, let me give you a 30,000ft view of why this is wrong:

Which of the following passwords is easiest to memorize?

1. "SlickDeals2020"
2. "4 God So Loved The World"
3. "3!dFi&m_udhUfhhaAEJ75jf@HbzOpm37lauma_25381047361"

You've probably answered #1 or #2. Security professionals (hackers by another name) have tools that generate passwords. Without getting into the details, it would be beyond trivial to crack password #1. Password #2 would take longer, but since it is a passage in a popular book, the time it would take to crack it is reduced. Either one should take less than 1 day to compromise. (The first should take less than 10 minutes)

Password #3 is sufficiently random and has a very long length. It would take even the best known supercomputers *years* to crack that password. That makes it the best password of the 3, but obviously the most difficult to memorize.

That's what a passsword manager like LastPass, 1Password, Keychain with a YubiKey is for. You can generate wildly complex pass phrases that make accessing your data out of reach for most would-be hackers and secure all of that data with a physical hardware device that stays in your possession.

Yes, I hear you: "I haven't done anything wrong; the govt isn't cracking my passwords;I don't care if they get into my acct" and so on. Cool, I get it. Do you. Just know that using your spouse's name and 4 digits makes you the low-hanging fruit for somebody learning how to hack, let alone someone who is competent at their job.
In this case it's not the size that matters, but the technology behind it.
10% ca$hb@ck as well at a popular site. Saves about $9.50 on a 2-pack of NFC USB-C models. You can message me if you can't find it and want the exact name.

Note that you should always buy a minimum of 2, because if you ever lose a key you don't want to be locked out of your accounts. (should always have 2 associated).

219 Comments

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Nov 22, 2020
37,299 Posts
Joined Aug 2007
Nov 22, 2020
fyu
Nov 22, 2020
37,299 Posts
Quote from t4m :
Given that not many sites support it and then they have a backup to SMS anyways, I haven't been able to justify the usage. Plus I find it difficult to use with iPhone. I do have one, but never used it other then testing and setting it up.

How do people use them. For example just for email?
Sms is considerably less secure. It's way better than just password but less than a hardware key.
Nov 22, 2020
547 Posts
Joined Jun 2017
Nov 22, 2020
MK2172
Nov 22, 2020
547 Posts
Quote from JONLIVE :
Best authenticator is your brain, keep it there, no hacks
You are one of those who keeps the same pwd for all the sites, bit completed, but repeated and one site exposes your pwd, your are completely exposed and you will feel naked.
3
Nov 22, 2020
547 Posts
Joined Jun 2017
Nov 22, 2020
MK2172
Nov 22, 2020
547 Posts
Quote from fyu :
Sms is considerably less secure. It's way better than just password but less than a hardware key.
I thought SMS pin is secured, but I saw some one spoof the number and the pin to their phone. Not hard to do it either..
Nov 22, 2020
2,502 Posts
Joined May 2006
Nov 22, 2020
tivoboy
Nov 22, 2020
2,502 Posts
Whats this about not working with lastpass? Is there even a key that isn't a 5 at this point? does anyone know if USB-A to USB-C adapter would allow a USB-A key to be used in a USB-C laptop? or will it work through a dongle?
Nov 22, 2020
2,915 Posts
Joined Mar 2012
Nov 22, 2020
cyclops13
Nov 22, 2020
2,915 Posts
I have been using google to genrate complex passwords and store them. I use google authenticator as a two factor for google account sign in. What additional benefit does this provide?
1
1
Nov 22, 2020
547 Posts
Joined Jun 2017

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Nov 22, 2020
283 Posts
Joined Nov 2009
Nov 22, 2020
bstegner
Nov 22, 2020
283 Posts
Quote from tivoboy :
Whats this about not working with lastpass? Is there even a key that isn't a 5 at this point? does anyone know if USB-A to USB-C adapter would allow a USB-A key to be used in a USB-C laptop? or will it work through a dongle?

Yes... I use my Yubikey 5 NFC that way with my ipad and galaxy s9.

https://support.yubico.com/hc/en-...C-Adapters
Last edited by bstegner November 22, 2020 at 11:07 AM.

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Nov 22, 2020
266 Posts
Joined Jun 2020
Nov 22, 2020
tiggerooze
Nov 22, 2020
266 Posts
Quote from tivoboy :
Whats this about not working with lastpass? Is there even a key that isn't a 5 at this point? does anyone know if USB-A to USB-C adapter would allow a USB-A key to be used in a USB-C laptop? or will it work through a dongle?
USB adapters are hit and miss. If the software will check for a dongle attached during the key request/authentication, it will work. In my experience good phones work fine, crap ones do not work - they never check if a key is attached to the usb port.
3
Nov 22, 2020
2,041 Posts
Joined Nov 2015
Nov 22, 2020
alexatie
Nov 22, 2020
2,041 Posts
Yubikey nfc vs yubikey 5? anyone has input?
Nov 22, 2020
473 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
Nov 22, 2020
bubblegoose
Nov 22, 2020
473 Posts
It looks like we brought the Yubico site down. I was in the middle of checking out and got this message:

Under Maintenance
We'll be back shortly
yubico
Last edited by bubblegoose November 22, 2020 at 11:16 AM.
Nov 22, 2020
89 Posts
Joined Sep 2013
Nov 22, 2020
dealminer13
Nov 22, 2020
89 Posts
Quote from AlexanderA3690 :
For anyone who really thinks this way, let me give you a 30,000ft view of why this is wrong:

Which of the following passwords is easiest to memorize?

1. "SlickDeals2020"
2. "4 God So Loved The World"
3. "3!dFi&m_udhUfhhaAEJ75jf@HbzOpm37lauma_25381047361"

You've probably answered #1 or #2. Security professionals (hackers by another name) have tools that generate passwords. Without getting into the details, it would be beyond trivial to crack password #1. Password #2 would take longer, but since it is a passage in a popular book, the time it would take to crack it is reduced. Either one should take less than 1 day to compromise. (The first should take less than 10 minutes)

Password #3 is sufficiently random and has a very long length. It would take even the best known supercomputers *years* to crack that password. That makes it the best password of the 3, but obviously the most difficult to memorize.

That's what a passsword manager like LastPass, 1Password, Keychain with a YubiKey is for. You can generate wildly complex pass phrases that make accessing your data out of reach for most would-be hackers and secure all of that data with a physical hardware device that stays in your possession.

Yes, I hear you: "I haven't done anything wrong; the govt isn't cracking my passwords;I don't care if they get into my acct" and so on. Cool, I get it. Do you. Just know that using your spouse's name and 4 digits makes you the low-hanging fruit for somebody learning how to hack, let alone someone who is competent at their job.
Totally agree, however many sites have max 20 characters limit for passwords.
2
Nov 22, 2020
37,299 Posts
Joined Aug 2007
Nov 22, 2020
fyu
Nov 22, 2020
37,299 Posts
Quote from cyclops13 :
I have been using google to genrate complex passwords and store them. I use google authenticator as a two factor for google account sign in. What additional benefit does this provide?
This keeps it off your phone. Security wise its slightly better. Your phone can theoretically be hacked.
This hardware key is much harder to hack.
Nov 22, 2020
37,122 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
Nov 22, 2020
SnakePlisken
Nov 22, 2020
37,122 Posts
Quote from bstegner :
Yes... I use my Yubikey 5 NFC that way with my ipad and galaxy s9.

https://support.yubico.com/hc/en-...C-Adapters
thanks
Nov 22, 2020
1,439 Posts
Joined Oct 2016

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

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Nov 22, 2020
2,936 Posts
Joined Apr 2010
Nov 22, 2020
wbs3333
Nov 22, 2020
2,936 Posts
So for someone with a laptop with USB type A ports, a smart phone with USB C and NFC, which Yubikey model is better?

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