Dashlane lets you open an account with a FIDO2-spec USB security key as your authentication.

One of the better-known password managers is now inviting people to try it without having to create yet another password. Instead, Dashlane is now inviting people to try opening a new account secured only by a USB security key compliant with the “FIDO2” authentication standard; FIDO being short for Fast Identity Online.

Emphasize “try.” The company’s support page for this “early access” program notes that it supports only Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge, not Dashlane’s mobile apps. For now, it doesn’t let you create an account secured only by a passkey, the form of FIDO2 security more people use. 

The page also highlights a warning that this is an early-days exercise: “Important: Accounts created as part of the early access program are for testing purposes only. We recommend using your primary Dashlane account to store and manage your data.”


More

The Verge: You can now sign into a Microsoft Account without a password using a security key

Microsoft is the first company to support passwordless authentication using FIDO2 WebAuthn and CTAP2 standards…

Read More →

Bank Info Security: State of the Authentication Landscape

In this Bank Info Security article, Shane Weeden, an authentication expert with IBM Security, discusses…

Read More →

Tech Target: How can U2F authentication end phishing attacks?

Tech Target reports on Google’s adoption of FIDO U2F security keys as a strategy to…

Read More →