The Guardian (USA)

TechScape: Apple, Google and Microsoft are about to make passwords a thing of the past

- Alex Hern

What if you never had to type in a password again? Imagine. An internatio­nal day of celebratio­n. Children dancing in the streets. Soldiers laying down their arms and hugging tearfully across the battlefiel­d.

Or, at least, a mild improvemen­t in your daily life. That’s what Apple, Google and Microsoft are offering, with a fairly rare triple announceme­nt that the three tech giants are all adopting the Fido standard and ushering in a passwordle­ss future. The standard replaces usernames and passwords with ‘passkeys’, log-in informatio­n stored directly on your device and only uploaded to the website when matched with biometric authentica­tion like a selfie or fingerprin­t. From Apple’s announceme­nt:

The three companies will roll out Fido support “over the course of the coming year”. The Fido2 standard is actually already public, and some companies support it already, largely for internal authentica­tion. But the standard has long lacked the final step necessary for ubiquity: making it easy to get started.

That’s what this latest announceme­nt is about. With the help of the platform owners, users will be able to sync their Fido “passkeys”, without needing to log in fresh on each new device. That takes it from a service that is nice addition to passwords, to one that can be fully used to replace them.

Ease of use is only part of the reason for the switch. Passkeys, secured with biometric identifica­tion on your phone, are faster than manually entering passwords, but if you use a password manager (and you should use a password manager) you’ll be able to enter passwords and login to most websites at the tap of a (fingerprin­t sensing) button anyway.

But the bigger reason is that passwords suck. They suck because of how they are used in practice: people make short, easy-to-guess passwords, and then re-use them across the internet. For many users, the more important a website is, the more likely the password is to be short and easy-toguess, because while you may tolerate entering a long, secure password once or twice, you won’t bother doing it several times a day.

And the ways we’ve tried to fix passwords … also suck. Requiremen­ts to add complexity to passwords, in an attempt to make it harder to break them by brute force, are notoriousl­y infu

riating, and frequently inept at securing the actual outcome they’re seeking: if “P@ssword1” is a valid password but “doubloon prorogue tunnel” (to offer a passphrase randomly generated by my password manager just now) isn’t, you’ve just reduced the security of someone’s account.

Two-factor authentica­tion, which asks you to link a second “factor” to your account – such as a phone number which gets texted, or another device, which you use to approve the login – has its own problems. The most popular forms of two-factor authentica­tion all involve the use of one-time passcodes, either texted to you or generated by an app on your phone or computer. And those one-time passcodes are just as open to phishing as a convention­al password, albeit with a shorter expiration date if they’re successful­ly stolen.

And so, if the Fido thing takes off, the world should get slightly more secure, slightly less frustratin­g and slightly smoother to move through.

What will it look like for you? Probably not that different in practice. One day, you’ll be making an account on a website and just … won’t be asked for a password. You might not even notice it happens. But rest assured: the children will be dancing in the streets anyway.

 ?? REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Silhouette of male hand typing on laptop keyboard at night Photograph: Cultura/
REX/Shuttersto­ck Silhouette of male hand typing on laptop keyboard at night Photograph: Cultura/

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