
Now that your OnlyKey is unlocked you see this screen. Proceed to setup accounts below Setting up accountsĮnter your PIN - After setup you are prompted to enter the PIN you set onto your OnlyKey six button keypad. You can also use the Self-destruct PIN if one has been set. The device will then have a solid green light on that indicates that it is ready to set up Repeat this until 10 incorrect PINs have been entered.

You must remove and reinsert your OnlyKey and enter 3 more incorrect PINs. This is an intentional safeguard so that your OnlyKey will not be inadvertently wiped by repeatedly pressing buttons. You will notice that after entering 3 incorrect PINs your OnlyKey is steadily blinking red. If you ever need to wipe and restore your OnlyKey DUO to factory defaults you can do that by entering 10 incorrect PINs. You will be prompted to enter your PIN from now on when using the OnlyKey. Your device is now set up and will automatically reboot. If you do not have a backup just select to complete the setup. If you have an OnlyKey backup to restore, select and select your OnlyKey backup file and then select to load it onto your OnlyKey. OpenPGP Keys - Import keys from Protonmail, Keybase, and Mailvelope.Mobile - Using OnlyKey with iOS and Android.Configure Two Factor Authentication (2FA).“We’re not exactly there with default settings on an iPhone yet, so there’s some work that developers need to do to enable their apps to work with the Lightning key. “It’s iPhone it’s restrictive,” says Jerrod Chong, senior vice president of product at Yubico. Yubico won’t have an actual product until later this year and needs developer buy-in for its Lightning token to reach its full potential. On the opposite side, it will offer a USB-C connector for MacBooks.

To that end, the company will finally be able to make a YubiKey that fits into the iPhone and iPad’s proprietary Lightning port, giving those devices the seamless security that already works so well on PCs. The upshot: Yubico has received MFi certification, meaning Apple will officially support it as a hardware partner. The only problem? It’s been largely unusable on the iPhone. Its YubiKey token can act as a second layer of security for your online accounts and can even let you skip out on using passwords altogether. Over the last several years, Yubico has become close to ubiquitous in the field of hardware authentication.
