Sure - it needs to be somewhat difficult to turn on, and turning it on needs to very clearly include an "I accept all responsibility for this" declaration.
Most of "us" already deal with these things though - there's no "forgot password" for my ssh keys or my ssl keys or my topt seeds - there's no "forgot password: for my 1Password and Keypass safes. We occasionally get to laugh at out less diligent colleagues and peers who belatedly reveal the time they "lost" the ssl private key or the production webserver ssh key, but it's not like we see critical infrastructure falling apart regularly because of forgotten-but-unretrievable passphrases.
But I suspect you're right, there'd probably be a whole lot of "Hold my beer and watch me turn on full personal responsibility here! Oh, hang on - shit. Oooops..." if Ama-Face-Goo-Yah-stagram allowed this...
very clearly include an "I accept all responsibility for this"
It can't be a simple checkbox, or an Agree button. Make someone type, exactly:
I accept all responsibility for this
Even then, the majority of the general public (as opposed to computer nerds) would be awfully upset at being locked out.
You're exactly right: there'd probably be a whole lot of "Hold my beer and watch me turn on full personal responsibility here! Oh, hang on - shit. Oooops..."
Most of "us" already deal with these things though - there's no "forgot password" for my ssh keys or my ssl keys or my topt seeds - there's no "forgot password: for my 1Password and Keypass safes. We occasionally get to laugh at out less diligent colleagues and peers who belatedly reveal the time they "lost" the ssl private key or the production webserver ssh key, but it's not like we see critical infrastructure falling apart regularly because of forgotten-but-unretrievable passphrases.
But I suspect you're right, there'd probably be a whole lot of "Hold my beer and watch me turn on full personal responsibility here! Oh, hang on - shit. Oooops..." if Ama-Face-Goo-Yah-stagram allowed this...