Google on Thursday announced that passkeys are being used by over 400 million Google accounts, authenticating users more than 1 billion times over the past two years.
"Passkeys are easy to use and phishing resistant, only relying on a fingerprint, face scan or a pin making them 50% faster than passwords," Heather Adkins, vice president of security engineering at Google, said.
Google on Tuesday announced the ability for all users to set up passkeys by default, five months after itΒ rolled out supportΒ for the FIDO Alliance-backed passwordless standard for Google Accounts on all platforms.
"This means the next time you sign in to your account, you'll start seeing prompts to create and use passkeys, simplifying your future sign-ins," Google's Sriram Karra and Christiaan
Microsoft is officially rolling out support for passkeys in Windows 11 today as part of aΒ major updateΒ to the desktop operating system.
The feature allows users to login to websites and applications without having to provide a username and password, instead relying on their device PIN or biometric information to complete the step.
Based onΒ FIDO standards, Passkeys wereΒ first announcedΒ in May