Microsoft has officially shifted to passkeys, such as facial recognition, fingerprint scans, and PINs, as the default sign-in method for all new accounts beginning this month, marking its most significant step yet toward a password-free future, according to TechRepublic.

The move coincides with World Password Day and aligns with the tech giant’s broader commitment to the Passkey Pledge, an industry initiative to eliminate passwords in favor of more secure, phishing-resistant login methods. In a blog post, Microsoft executives Joy Chik and Vasu Jakkal emphasized that passkey users are three times more likely to log in successfully than those using passwords. Although existing account holders can still use passwords, Microsoft is nudging them toward using biometrics or PINs by default. Nearly all Windows users already rely on Windows Hello, and the shift is backed by support from industry partners, including Apple and Google, who are also rolling out FIDO-compliant passkey systems across their platforms. The change promises to streamline security and user experience across the board.


More

BangkokPost: Building trust in the age of data breaches

The Thai government should be considering industry-backed authentication such as FIDO to meet expectations for…

Read More →

BleepingComputer: Microsoft Azure AD FIDO2 Passwordless Sign-In in Public Preview

Microsoft has announced public preview support for FIDO2 security keys in Azure Active Directory to…

Read More →

Brian Madden: What I learned about identity management at Identiverse 2019

According to Brian Madden, FIDO2 and WebAuthn are the biggest buzz in identity today and…

Read More →