Coming up on Reddit, May 26th, 2026…
You've logged in to something today. Probably several times. It took less than a second and the moment it was over, you'd already forgotten it happened. That's either the greatest achievement in modern security engineering — or the thing that makes it fragile. Usually, it's both.
I'm Jason Rasmussen, Chief Technology Officer at LastPass. My team makes the decisions that sit behind every login. Think about how credentials are stored, when autofill should and shouldn't kick in, how MFA works without slowing you down. Every decision is a tradeoff between security and speed, control and ease of use, what's safest in theory and what people will actually do.
Here's what I'm keen to get into:
- What Zero Knowledge means at the technical level and where its limits are
- Why the browser has become the most critical access path for organizations to secure
- How AI is accelerating the way people discover, learn and adopt more tools, and what that means for protecting credentials
- The real tradeoffs behind passkeys and where they fit in the evolution of how we log in
Ask me anything!