The ssh key breakage is worse than not handling certain key types. If the user has ECDSA key, then "ssh-add" will fail to add ANY keys, including RSA and DSA.
Do we really need the "acroread" of security key agents, with so many features that none of it is reliably secure?
The ssh key breakage is worse than not handling certain key types. If the user has ECDSA key, then "ssh-add" will fail to add ANY keys, including RSA and DSA.
Do we really need the "acroread" of security key agents, with so many features that none of it is reliably secure?