May10 , 2026

    Bitwarden begins adding passkey support to its password manager

    Related

    Renée Zellweger & Sissy Spacek to Star in ‘A Woman in the Sun’

    Renée Zellweger‘s next big movie project has been...

    The Devil wears Favored Nations: Cast salaries & Box office

    ‘THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA 2’ cast salaries:Meryl...

    Ring Author Kōji Suzuki Dies at 68

    Koji Suzuki, the world-renowned novelist best-known for...

    Riley Green Joins ‘The Voice’ Season 30 as a Coach

    The Voice is getting a new vocal coach! Country...

    Share


    Passkeys can replace traditional passwords with your device’s own authentication methods. That way, you can sign in to Gmail, PayPal, or iCloud just by activating Face ID on your iPhone, your Android phone’s fingerprint sensor, or with Windows Hello on a PC. 

    Built on WebAuthn (or Web Authentication) tech, two different keys are generated when you create a passkey: one stored by the website or service where your account is and a private key stored on the device you use to verify your identity.

    Of course, if passkeys are stored on your device, what happens if it gets broken or lost? Since passkeys work across multiple devices, you may have a backup available. Many services that support passkeys will also reauthenticate to your phone number or email address or to a hardware security key, if you have one.

    Apple’s and Google’s password vaults already support passkeys, and so do password managers like 1Password and Dashlane. 1Password has also created an online directory listing services that allow users to sign in using a passkey.



    Source link