Microsoft Joins Group Seeking To Replace Passwords
Microsoft
has joined the FIDO
Alliance, a group attempting to craft industry standards that reduce
reliance on passwords, long regarded as a weak point in Web security.
Launched in
July 2012, FIDO, stands for Fast
IDentity Online, is hoping its specifications for security devices and
browser plugins will be widely adopted across the technology industry.
Such efforts
depend on voluntary adoption by many companies and organizations. So far, those
participating in FIDO include heavyweights Google, MasterCard, Lenovo,
Infineon, LG Electronics and a variety of smaller companies.
Authentication
hardware and software widely varies, with many proprietary clients and
protocols. FIDO hopes that standardizing authentication technologies will lead
to better interoperability and innovations in biometrics, PINs (personal
identification numbers) and secondary authentication technologies, according to
its website.
Usernames
and passwords underpin most online services but are easy to intercept. Computer
security experts have long warned of password weaknesses, such as easy-to-guess
ones and people who reuse them across multiple services.
Password
replacement technology has a high bar: it needs to be both effective and simple
for users.
FIDO
envisions a software client that’s installed on computers that employ public
key cryptography to authenticate users. All major Web browsers will be
supported. The initial focus will be on securing access through Web browsers to
Web applications. The group also plans authentication options for Android
phones soon and eventually for Windows tablets and Apple products.
When FIDO
authentication is used, a user will not need to submit their biometric or
personal information to an online service.
The FIDO
Alliance will eventually submit its protocol to groups dedicated to Web
standards, such as the Internet Engineering Task
Force or the World Wide Web Consortium.
Via: PCWorld
No comments:
Post a Comment