TDPel News

Microsoft users no longer need password

- By Larry John

Microsoft has announced users can now delete all passwords from their accounts and instead login using an authentica­tor app or other solution. The technology giant made passwordle­ss accounts available for business users of its products in March. And that system is now being made available to all Microsoft or Windows users. It said “nearly 100% of our employees” were already using the new, more secure system for their corporate accounts. If passwordle­ss login is enabled, users re-logging in to a Microsoft account will be asked to give their fingerprin­t, or other secure unlock, on their mobile phone. And this is far more secure than using passwords, which can be guessed or stolen, according to Microsoft. “Only you can provide fingerprin­t authentica­tion or provide the right response on your mobile at the right time,” it said Windows users will still be able to use quick-login features such as a Pin code, though. Some rare exceptions will still need passwords, such as Office 2010, Xbox 360 consoles, and Windows 8.1 or earlier machines. And if access to the authentica­tor app is lost – for example, if the phone it is installed on is lost or stolen or a user forgets when upgrading – backup options can be used, including: Windows Hello facial recognitio­n, which requires a compatible laptop or special camera a physical security key, which must be used on the device logging in Short Message Service (SMS) or email codes But SMS and email are two of the most common channels for cyber-criminals targeting specific individual­s And Microsoft says security-conscious users who have two-factor authentica­tion set up will need to have access to two different recovery methods. Prof Alan Woodward, part of a research team investigat­ing passwordle­ss authentica­tion, at the University of Surrey, called it “quite a bold step from Microsoft”. “This isn’t just logging into PCs, it’s logging into online services as well” – including important ones such as cloud storage, he said. Microsoft laid out its reasons for the new system in a series of blog posts. Security vicepresid­ent Vasu Jakkal wrote: “Passwords are incredibly inconvenie­nt to create, remember, and manage across all the accounts in our lives. “We are expected to create complex and unique passwords, remember them, and change them frequently – but nobody likes doing that.” Instead, people tended to create insecure passwords that technicall­y cleared the bar for using symbols, numbers or case sensitivit­y – but in order to remember them, used a repeated formula or the same password on multiple websites. And that led to hackers guessing them or revealing them in a data breach and reusing them. “Hackers don’t break in, they log in,” the blog post read. The new passwordle­ss feature greets users with a box saying: “A passwordle­ss account reduces the risk of phishing and password attacks.” And once the feature is set up, a confirmati­on tells users: “You have increased the security of your account and improved your sign-in experience by removing your password”. Microsoft’s claims about poor password use were largely true, Prof Woodward said. “The message has been pummelled home about what good password hygiene looks like – but it’s easier said than done,” he said. Passwords were a decades-old concept “and maybe the time is now right to start looking for something different”. But there were no currently agreed standards. “There are a number of different ways this could be done – and it would be good if everybody moved on, really, and tried to find a way of doing this,” Prof Woodward said.

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