W3C announces the formal inclusion of the passwordless login mechanism “WebAuthn” into the web standard

Many users of network services have encountered problems due to passwords. And because of the advancement of the times, the security of passwords is becoming unreliable. In recent years, the online world has been constantly seeking a new and non-password-based user authentication method, and now it seems that there is finally a formal answer. The W3C, which is responsible for the Internet standard, recently announced that they have determined all the standards for Web Authentication (WebAuthn) and officially incorporated WebAuthn into the web standard. Under this new standard, users can use their fingerprints or their mobile phones to log in to a supported website without entering any password. Because W3C has started to recommend browsers and websites to support WebAuthn in the past year, some websites have already add login methods using WebAuthn. Now WebAuthn has officially become the network authentication standard. I believe that more websites will support WebAuthn’s …

DNS Flag Day: Will Your Website Survive?

What is the DNS Flag Day? The Domain Name System (DNS) was born in the 1980s and the first DNS Extension Protocol Specification (EDNS) was developed in 1990. Although the specifications were formulated nearly 30 years ago, some hosts still do not support the EDNS protocol, which has caused other hosts to make additional countermeasures for this, slowing down the DNS speed and limiting the new features of the DNS. For this reason, DNS vendors and large public DNS service providers will delete these old processes on the “DNS Flag Day” day.