NEWS
New Web Standard Would Allow Touch ID and Face ID to be Used to Login to Websites
1598
2018-04-11
Posted by 3uTools

New Web Standard Would Allow Touch ID and Face ID to be Used to Login to Websites


A new web standard being recommended for adoption would open the way for both Face ID and Touch ID to be used to login to websites.


The API, known as WebAuthn, allows existing security devices – like fingerprint readers, cameras and USB keys – to be used for website authentication …


Firefox supports WebAuthn from today, with Chrome and Edge slated for support within the next few months, reports Engadget.


There’s as yet no word on Safari, but with all current and recent iPhones and iPads offering either Face ID or Touch ID, and the latter supported on the MacBook Pro too, this would be tailor-made for Apple. It cannot be used with other browsers without Apple’s support.


Technically, the status of the new standard remains a ‘recommendation,’ but support by browsers is an important step toward formal ratification.


This document was published by the Web Authentication Working Group as a Candidate Recommendation. This document is intended to become a W3C Recommendation […] For the Web Authentication specification to move to Proposed Recommendation we must show two independent, interoperable implementations of the Web Authentication API in browsers.


Apple is sometimes a little slow to adopt new standards – witness the somewhat late support for 3G and LTE in iPhones – but I very much hope that it will add WebAuthn sooner rather than later.


Source: 9to5mac

Related Articles
Hackers Claim to Break Face ID a Week After iPhone X Release This is How the First Phone With a Fingerprint Sensor Under the Display Works iPhone SE 2 Again Rumored to Launch in First Half of 2018 Korean Report Claims Apple Will Drop the iPhone X Notch in 2019 iPhones iPhone X Face ID Again Unlocked With Mask, Even With 'Require Attention' Turned On Google Removes Passcode/Touch ID/Face ID lock from Drive, Docs, Sheets & Slides iPhone X: Six Core A11 Fusion Chip, Wireless Charging Hints, Apple Pay + Face ID Details and more Researchers Break Apple's iPhone and iPad Activation Lock