now that you have your switch apart, it wouldn't be difficult at all to swap cylinders so you could keep your key.
I refuse to order a new switch for now. I have successfully completed the soldering and all is good for now. If it breaks again, only then will I consider ordering a new "defective" switch. If they finally issue a recall, I'll get it replaced then.
given that none of us [or very few] want to ride around with spanners and soldering irons so that at the end of a 6 or 8 hundred mile day [or, worse, in the middle of one] we can fix the ignition system.
If you have a failure on the street like I did, simply carrying a pair of angle cutters and two wire nuts (or a 30+ amp switch with screw terminals and a single wire nut) will get you going again. Cutting the wire loom as close to the switch as possible to access the red and brown wires is what you want to do. If you have access, cut only the red and brown wires and either connect them with a wire nut or hook them up to the switch. If you end up cutting the two blue wires, just connect them with a wire nut. Oh, it's also a good idea to disconnect the battery before attempting such feats in case the hot lead accidentally touches metal.
red wire does ?brown wire ?
blue and yellow ?
blue and white ?
I'm still learning how to read the wiring diagram from the owner's manual, and I didn't test anything while I had it apart, but it appears the red wire is the hot wire connected to the battery through the main fuse. It appears the brown wire is the load line that supplies the switched power to the bike. One of the blue wires appears to go to the ECU. No idea where the other wire comes from or goes to.