Passkeys,” the secure authentication mechanism built to replace passwords, are getting more portable and easier for organizations to implement thanks to new initiatives the FIDO Alliance announced this month.

At the FIDO Alliance’s Authenticate Conference in Carlsbad, California, on Monday, October 14, researchers are announcing two projects that will make passkeys easier for organizations to offer—and easier for everyone to use. One is a new technical specification called Credential Exchange Protocol (CXP) that will make passkeys portable between digital ecosystems, a feature that users have increasingly demanded. The other is a website, called Passkey Central, where developers and system administrators can find resources like metrics and implementation guides that make it easier to add support for passkeys on existing digital platforms.

“To me, both announcements are part of the broader story of the industry working together to stop our dependence on passwords,” Andrew Shikiar, CEO of the FIDO Alliance, told WIRED ahead of Monday’s announcements. “And when it comes to CXP, we have all these companies who are fierce competitors willing to collaborate on credential exchange.”


More

ITU: Time to eliminate the password: New report on next-generation authentication for digital financial services

FIDO specifications enable users to authenticate locally to their device using biometrics in a model…

Read More →

ComputerWeekly: Data protection practices still poor, survey shows

FIDO Alliance CMO Andrew Shikiar tells ComputerWeekly that the vast majority of breaches are caused…

Read More →

ComputerWeekly: Time to deploy strong authentication, says FIDO

In this ComputerWeekly story, FIDO Alliance CMO Andrew Shikiar explains that with the tools required…

Read More →