Keypass - WordPress Login Without PasswordKeypass - WordPress Login Without Password
Passwordless login with passkeys - a better alternative for securing our sensitive information onlineOverview
Passkeys are a safer and easier alternative to passwords. With passkeys, users can sign in to apps and websites with a biometric sensor (such as a fingerprint or facial recognition), PIN, or pattern, freeing them from having to remember and manage passwords.
Developers and users both hate passwords: they give a poor user experience, they add conversion friction, and they create security liability for both users and developers. Google Password Manager in Android and Chrome reduces the friction through autofill; for developers looking for even further improvements in conversion and security, passkeys and identity federation are the industry's modern approaches.
A passkey can meet multifactor authentication requirements in a single step, replacing both a password and OTP (e.g. 6-digit SMS code) to deliver robust protection against phishing attacks and avoids the UX pain of SMS or app-based one-time passwords. Since passkeys are standardized, a single implementation enables a passwordless experience across all of a users' devices, across different browsers and operating systems.
A number of services are already using passkeys in their systems.
- DocuSign
- Kayak
- Mercari
- NTT Docomo
- PayPal
- Shopify
- Yahoo! JAPAN
Features
Passkeys are easier:
- Users can select an account to sign in with. Typing the username is not required.
- Users can authenticate using device's screen lock such as a fingerprint sensor, facial recognition or PIN.
- Once a passkey is created and registered, the user can seamlessly switch to a new device and immediately use it without needing to re-enroll (unlike traditional biometric auth, which requires setup on each device).
Passkeys are safer:
- Developers only save a public key to the server instead of a password, meaning there's far less value for a bad actor to hack into servers, and far less cleanup to do in the event of a breach.
- Passkeys protect users from phishing attacks. Passkeys work only on their registered websites and apps; a user cannot be tricked into authenticating on a deceptive site because the browser or OS handles verification.
- Passkeys reduce costs for sending SMS, making them a safer and more cost-effective means for two-factor authentication.