Passkeys are intended to be more secure and easier to use than passwords. Instead of typing in a password (or letting a password manager do it) and verifying with a multi-factor authentication method, passkeys only require a trusted device and either biometric or PIN verification. Part of why passkeys seem likely to replace passwords is that they’re designed by a consortium called the FIDO Alliance and championed by Apple, Google, and Microsoft. These three companies have already baked support for passkeys into their browsers and ecosystems, which means that for the first time, there’s a viable alternative to passwords. That said, passkeys have yet to see widespread adoption.


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Yahoo!Finance: WinMagic Reveals What Comes After Passkeys: Identity Assurance That Lives Beyond Login

WinMagic exposes the fundamental flaw in modern authentication: passkeys secure the login, but attackers have…

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Bleeping Computer: Bitwarden adds support for passkey login on Windows 11

Bitwarden announced support for logging into Windows 11 devices using passkeys stored in the manager’s…

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Biometric Update: NFC-based IDV with liveness delivers zero fraud, fewer support calls for BankID Norway

With 4.7 million enrolled users in a country of roughly 5.6 million people, BankID Norway is one…

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