Apple this week provided a glimpse into a feature that solves one of the biggest drawbacks of passkeys, the industry-wide standard for website and app authentication that isn’t susceptible to credential phishing and other attacks targeting passwords.

The import/export feature, which Apple demonstrated at this week’s Worldwide Developers Conference, will be available in the next major releases of iOS, macOS, iPadOS, and visionOS. It aims to solve one of the biggest shortcomings of passkeys as they have existed to date. Passkeys created on one operating system or credential manager are largely bound to those environments. A passkey created on a Mac, for instance, can sync easily enough with other Apple devices connected to the same iCloud account. Transferring them to a Windows device or even a dedicated credential manager installed on the same Apple device has been impossible.


More

VentureBeat: It’s not too late to get biometrics right

Biometric authentication is the most secure and usable form of authentication available today– when implemented…

Read More →

ComputerWorld: Apple just made Safari a better fit for the enterprise

Apple’s latest update for Safari includes support for FIDO2 security keys to improve the verification…

Read More →

Biometric Update: FIDO Alliance to bring biometrics and strong assurance to identity verification

Authentication is getting easier thanks to next-gen initiatives like FIDO Alliance standards, Jeremy Grant shared…

Read More →


Subscribe to the FIDO newsletter

Stay Connected, Stay Engaged

Receive the latest news, events, research and implementation guidance from the FIDO Alliance. Learn about digital identity and fast, phishing-resistant authentication with passkeys.