Nelson Mail

Passwords will soon be obsolete

Within a couple of years every operating system, browser, major website or app is likely to support passwordle­ss authentica­tion, meaning you won’t need separate passwords for any of them, writes Damian Funnell.

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In 2004, Bill Gates was roundly mocked for his proclamati­on, to a select group of World Economic Forum participan­ts, that ‘‘two years from now, spam will be solved’’.

It was widely (and incorrectl­y) reported that Microsoft, which had a poor reputation for the security and reliabilit­y of its products at the time, would save us all from the dozens (or even hundreds) of spam messages we received daily.

The prospect seemed ridiculous, particular­ly given the sheer volume of spam messages most of us were drowning in at the time. Gates was made a laughing stock.

Gates’ prediction came to pass, however. It may have taken more than a couple of years, but the number of spam messages that reach our mailbox has plummeted since his prediction in Davos.

According to Statista, spam messages still make up about 40% of all email traffic, but the actual number of spam messages we receive is almost none.

The spam ‘‘problem’’ that Gates referred to in 2004 was the massive amount of unsolicite­d email that filled our inboxes day in and day out; masses of low-quality, highvolume messages that would fill our inboxes and crowd out the legitimate messages we actually cared about.

This problem has now largely been solved. Even those of us with email addresses that are published widely see very little spam in 2022.

Anti-spam technologi­es are so effective that, now, if someone tells you your message got ‘‘stuck in their spam filter’’, they’re probably lying.

The problem wasn’t solved because of the heroics of Gates or Microsoft alone. It was solved through the applicatio­n of a variety of technologi­es that make it much harder for spammers to reach us through our inboxes than it was 18 years ago.

Most spammers have given up and global spam volumes (as a percentage of all email traffic) have been dropping for several years.

This year at Davos, Gates would be excused for announcing that ‘‘two years from now, passwords will be solved’’.

The password problem has been around since the dawn of the computer age. Fernando Corbato first presented the idea of passwords at MIT way back in 1960 and passwords have been stuck to monitors and written in notebooks since.

A recent study by NordPass found that the average person has to remember approximat­ely 100 passwords for the various IT systems, apps and websites that they use every day.

For IT profession­als like yours truly that number can easily exceed 500.

It’s impossible to remember so many passwords, particular­ly as most sites implement password complexity rules (making passwords that much harder to remember).

Most people resort to reusing the same passwords across multiple sites, which makes passwords less secure. (Pro tip – use a password manager and a different password for every site.)

Industry has tried to address the password problem by making it harder and harder to log in to things. Increasing­ly complex password requiremen­ts, captcha tests, two-factor authentica­tion, biometrics and a variety of other techniques make it harder to log in to your favourite sites but they also make it harder for hackers to do so if your passwords are compromise­d.

But these are just workaround­s that don’t solve the biggest problem – the existence of the password itself.

Enter the Fido (‘‘fast identity online’’) alliance, whose stated mission is to ‘‘help reduce the world’s over-reliance on passwords’’. And not a moment too soon!

Comprising a who’s who of industry heavyweigh­ts (board-level members include Amazon, Google, Intel and Apple, to name a few), Fido is an industry-wide alliance that has been working since 2013 to develop authentica­tion protocols to make logging in easier and, more importantl­y, more secure.

One of Fido’s most exciting developmen­ts is a set of standards that allow users to register and sign-in to operating systems, websites and apps without ever having to enter a password.

For most of us our phones will become our main authentica­tion device. Unlocking your phone (using your pin or biometric login) will typically be enough to authentica­te you. No password required.

The process of registerin­g and logging on is simpler, but inherently more secure, than when using a password. It also makes it impossible for hackers to steal your passwords through the use of phishing attacks, etc. Public key cryptograp­hy is used to make it all secure behind the scenes.

On May 5, world password day, Apple, Google and Microsoft announced plans to implement Fido-compliant passwordle­ss sign-in across all of their mobile, desktop and browser platforms by May next year.

This is huge. As Microsoft’s Vasu Jakkal put it, you’ll be able to ‘‘sign in to an app or service on nearly any device, regardless of the platform or browser the device is running. For example, users can sign in on a Google Chrome browser that’s running on Microsoft Windows – using a passkey on an Apple device.’’

Between them Apple, Google and Microsoft control the vast majority of the operating systems and browsers that we use every day. Where they lead the rest of the industry will follow.

Within a couple of years every operating system, browser, major website or app is likely to support Fido-based passwordle­ss authentica­tion, meaning you won’t need separate passwords for any of them. Two years from now the password problem may, finally, be solved.

Damian Funnell is founder of Choice Technology, an IT services company, and a technology commentato­r. He is contactabl­e at damian.funnell@choicetech­nology. co.nz.

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