Instead of passing a randomly generated string of text, passkeys use the " WebAuthn" standard to generate a public-private keypair, just like SSH. The passkey gets rid of that legacy text box interface and instead stores a secret, passes that secret to a website, and if it matches, you're logged in. Today, the right way to deal with a password field is to have your password manager generate a string of random, unmemorable junk characters to stick in the password field. Then, password managers started automating that typing and memorization, making it convenient to use longer, more secure passwords. Today password managers are a bit of a hack-the password text box was originally meant for a human to manually type text into, and you were expected to remember your password. Passkeys are the next step in evolution of password managers. Google's latest blog says: "With the latest version of Chrome, we're enabling passkeys on Windows 11, macOS, and Android." The Google Password Manager on Android is ready to sync all your passkeys to the cloud, and if you can meet all the hardware requirements and find a supporting service, you can now sign-in to something with a passkey. "Passkey" is built on industry standards and backed by all the big platform vendors-Google, Apple, Microsoft-along with the FIDO Alliance. Following Google's beta rollout of the feature in October, passkeys are now hitting Chrome stable M108. Passkeys are here to (try to) kill the password.
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November 2023
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