Not long ago, I added a new device to my Google account. As I signed in, it asked me to authenticate myself by sending an approval message to the YouTube app on my other devices. Pretty standard fare.
But it occurred to me that if one of my devices was ever stolen, this was a dangerous attack path. I require FaceID on important apps such as authenticators, password vaults, bank apps, and email. Sure, I have a passcode on my phone and iPad as well, but without biometrics on these applications, the entire security of my digital life relies on a 6-digit number. If someone shoulder-surfed my PIN – or grabbed my unlocked phone after I’d unlocked it – it would be very easy to lock me out of my accounts, change my passwords, drain my accounts, etc.
It’s not a likely scenario, but because the consequences are so catastrophic and the fix is so easy, I use biometrics.
I didn’t require FaceID on my YouTube app because…so what? I don’t require FaceID on the calculator app, either. If someone were to open my YouTube app, what could they really do? Leave some angry comments on LowEndBoxTV videos? Delete my playlists?
But when I recently authenticated with the YouTube app to sign into my email on another device, it made me realize that the YouTube app is actually another authenticator.
So I required FaceID.
And Then the Pain Came
OK, admittedly, “pain” is a bit strong.
Coincidentally, my AirPods became unpaired from my iPhone shortly thereafter. I re-paired them – it happens. Then I noticed that everytime I tapped to unpause, Apple Music launched.
No. Matter. What. I’m listening to a Caleb Hammer episode and pause, and then when I unpause, whatever Apple Music song I last listened to started. I thought it was because of my re-pairing. I tried killing the Apple Music app. No change. Unpausing would actually launch the Apple Music app and start playing the last song. This was super-irritating, because I often work and hike while listening to YouTube. Pausing and unpausing those videos with my AirPods is something I do a dozen times a day.
I dove into Bluetooth settings. Nothing. I asked our AI overlords, and it lead me down a rabbit hole of settings – some of which didn’t exist, in classic AI style – but no change.
Took me a couple days, but then I put two and two together and removed FaceID from YouTube. Instantly things worked as expected again.
Security is the Inverse of Convenience
So we’re at the classic intersection of convenience and security. If you want more of the latter, you have to give up some of the former.
Hmmm.




















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