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Looks like they are just rolling out support for Android 14 and up.

blog.1password.com/save-use-passkeys-android/

Save and sign in to Android apps with passkeys using 1Password | 1Password

1Password users on Android can now use passkeys. Compare 1Password and Google’s passkey solutions. See how simple it is to log in to Android apps with passkeys.

1Password Blog

Proton is also the ONLY passkey provider that I’ve seen allowing you to store, share, and export passkeys just like you can with passwords!

1Password has had this for several months.

As others have mentioned, Bitwarden also has this. This really feels like an ad.

Passkeys in 1Password: The Future of Passwordless Authentication | 1Password

Passkeys are a simpler and secure way to login without the need for memorizing complicated passwords.

Holy shit…glass shattered. I fucking loved Pushing Daisies and I never even made that connection with how mean he is in Foundation comparatively.

According to this article from the spring the UN listed civilian deaths at 8,000 including 2,000 from Mariupol.

Do you have a source for the Ukrainian government value you stated?

U.N. says recorded civilian toll of 8,000 in Ukraine is 'tip of the iceberg'

More than 8,000 civilians have been recorded killed in Ukraine since Russia invaded nearly a year ago, the U.N. human rights office said on Tuesday, describing the figure as only the "tip of the iceberg" with thousands more thought to have died.

Reuters
Assuming you mean Ragnarok? The 2018 version of GoW already came to PC.
You don’t have to store them with Google. Passkeys are supported in both iOS and Android natively. Within the last few months both Bitwarden and 1Password support storing passkeys as well.

I’m stealing this from another comment:

The main advantage comes with phishing resistance. Standard MFA (time based codes) is not phishing resistant. Users can be social engineered into giving up a password and MFA token. Other MFA types, such as pop up notifications, are susceptible to MFA fatigue. Similar to YubiKeys, Passkeys implement a phishing resistant MFA by storing an encryption key, along with requiring a biometric. The benefit here is that these are far easier for the average user, and the user does not need to carry a physical device. Sure, fingerprints could possibly be grabbed with physical presence, but there is far less risk that a users fingerprint is stolen, than a user being social engineered over the phone into giving creds. For most organizations and users, this is far more secure.

I think John Oliver was the first to recite it. I could be wrong though.

youtu.be/bV42PgyOFE0

“I do not like that man Ted Cruz” full poem by John Oliver (updated 2/22/22)

YouTube