I think a lot of people here don’t understand the danger of this fully and dismiss it with “Just use Firefox, problem solved”. Unfortunately, once this becomes widely available, that is once Chrome ships it, websites will start to use it. Maybe Amazon will just not sell to you anymore when you’re browsing with Firefox? Maybe YouTube wont serve any videos if you’re using Linux? Your bank will certainly implement this and only allow Windows 11 with Edge or some shit like that. Once this is implemented, we will all suffer, even if we’re using better alternatives right now.

Your bank will certainly implement this

My brother in Christ, it was 2020 before my bank supported passwords longer than 8 characters. We have 30 or 40 years before we need to worry about the banks.

Some banks are still running windows 98 internally, admitedly so long as said system isnt connected to the internet it should be fine.

Win 98

This isn’t true, this can’t be true and I refuse to believe it.

@xavier666 @vaultdweler13, it's true, For internal use with PCs connected to the central server itself and not to the network, it is used for compatibility with corporate software, sometimes still very old Windows. This, when using it on the one hand only in a specialized way and on the other hand only locally, is more than enough. The same in factories in production for the automation of some valve or machinery with repetitive processes, a super-pc with a NASA OS is not needed.
For PCs at workshop, I can understand Win98. The OS is just a bootloader to a single application. But for banking, it’s a terrible security hazard.
@xavier666, only if it is used in subsidiaries where they have to manage money movements over the network, but not in local administrative applications where it is irrelevant, as in all purely local uses. In monoapplications in this area, even an old MsDOS will be worth it.
They have traveled to the Moon with an SO from a Tamagochi.
As long as it’s isolated to local use, I guess it’s fine. But if it connects to the internet, may lord have mercy on the firewall.
@xavier666, that is the point, locally is irrelevant what you use, but not so in the internet.

I posted this elsewhere in this thread but hackers have managed to access data on air gapped computers

Unfortunately nothing is safe from determined hackers. The question is if anyone cares enough to steal your bank’s data

Clever Attack Uses the Sound of a Computer’s Fan to Steal Data

By controlling the speed of a computer's internal fans, researchers show how they can steal passwords and other data from "air-gapped" machines.

WIRED