h a l f b a k e r yReplace "light" with "sausages" and this may work...
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The move to 2-factor is accelerating, with many sites now requiring you to enter the code they sent to your phone.
Certainly preferable to passwords, but if I'm sitting right next to my computer, and the phone is in my pocket -- and if, like many if not most -- I'm actually always working in just
such a setup -- would be convenient if the phone, having received such a code, notified the PC it's right next to, so that you wouldn't have to take it of your pocket, potentially put glasses on, and type 6 to 9 digits in.
Incidentally, WiFi based location is sufficiently advanced (For instance, Magic Leap uses it for location based object placement) that you could know you really are that close to the computer in question. A pin entry on the computer (but a well known pin) could guarantee that you're not spoofed in some way by someone knowing your number and doing something while "next to you".
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Reasonable original, technologically feasible (as long as the phone can be automatically bumped to a high power state for a few seconds) and it solves a problem. [+] |
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sensible, practical idea, easily implementable with current technology at little cost, would provide immediate benefit to users... - what's this doing on the Halfbakery? |
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You have a point, there is a distinct lack of explosives. I'm changing to [+/-] |
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Here's how it could work in a stupid way: the sms message is intercepted by the security app on the phone, which parses the number and encodes it as a "squawk" which it broadcasts over the phone's speaker. The mic on the computer is listening out for the squawk and authenticates the user if it hears the correctly encoded number. |
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My online bank website asks me to allow my browser to share my location, and won't let me log in unless I accept. |
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This is great unless someone's trying to hack your account from the same cybercafe you're in at the time. |
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for sure 21, which is why I added the actual WiFi location, which is "accurate enough" to have AR object location. |
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//Does it block you if// I don't know, I haven't ever tried. I don't generally while away my leisure hours experimenting with my online banking login. I am usually more busy counting my carpet offcuts and arranging them in order - I can never decide if they are best sorted by colour, or by length. |
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This math is well explored, unfortunately. You need to add virtual carpet cutoffs to fill the matrix. But perhaps there is new ground interpreting each place in the cutoff matrix as inherently containing an infinite selection of carpets in probability space with quantized results based on observation and probability. |
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Don't be rediculous, I don't want to cover a surface! I want to stack them in piles. |
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My friend says I should sort them by manufacturer's batch number. But I didn't always record that information. Is it too late for me to redeem myself? |
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