I think this is a product manager versus engineer conversation where you're talking over each other.
You're technically right that fingerprints aren't "good passwords", in fact they are not even passwords at all. But for most people, most of the time, they cover most of the same use cases at a better convenience price point.
For general use (i.e. unless you work in security or journalism) that's what matters.
You're technically right that fingerprints aren't "good passwords", in fact they are not even passwords at all. But for most people, most of the time, they cover most of the same use cases at a better convenience price point.
For general use (i.e. unless you work in security or journalism) that's what matters.