@profoundlynerdy
why are they not hashable? it's not like you're actually storing someone's fingerprints; they're just data points, can't those be encrypted too?
@warburtonstoryaddict The problem is it's not as hard as it sounds to spoof your biometrics.
I've shared this a few times. Let me know if it's duplicate from your perspective: https://hackaday.com/2015/11/10/your-unhashable-fingerprints-secure-nothing/
@profoundlynerdy this was helpful, thanks!
So since it looks like biometrics are here to stay, if people insist on using them they really should be for real-time, two step verification and nothing else?
@warburtonstoryaddict I'm not even sure that works.
@profoundlynerdy I did post this before reading the other responses.
So, I'll add to the question. As someone pointed out above, wouldn't the best case be that biometrics unlock a password manager, where the passwords are hashed?