The notion that passwords should become obsolete has been circling in computer science since at least 2004.
Bill Gates, speaking at the 2004
RSA Conference, predicted the demise of passwords, saying "they just don't meet the challenge for anything you really want to secure." Matt Honan, a journalist at
Wired, who was the victim of a hacking incident, in 2012 wrote "The age of the password has come to an end." Heather Adkins, manager of Information Security at
Google, in 2013 said that "passwords are done at Google." Eric Grosse, VP of security engineering at Google, states that "passwords and simple bearer tokens, such as cookies, are no longer sufficient to keep users safe."
Christopher Mims, writing in
The Wall Street Journal said the password "is finally dying" and predicted their replacement by device-based authentication, however, purposefully revealing his
Twitter password resulted in being forced to change his cellphone number. Avivah Litan of
Gartner said in 2014, "Passwords were dead a few years ago. Now they are more than dead." The reasons given often include reference to the
usability as well as security problems of passwords. Bonneau et al. systematically compared web passwords to 35 competing authentication schemes regarding their usability, deployability, and security. (The technical report is an extended version of the peer-reviewed paper by the same name.) Their analysis shows that most schemes do better than passwords on security, some schemes do better and some worse regarding usability, while
every scheme does worse than passwords on deployability. The authors conclude with the following observation: “Marginal gains are often not sufficient to reach the activation energy necessary to overcome significant transition costs, which may provide the best explanation of why we are likely to live considerably longer before seeing the funeral procession for passwords arrive at the cemetery.” Recent technological advancements (e.g., the proliferation of biometric devices and smartphones) and changing business culture (acceptance of biometrics and decentralized workforce, for example) continuously promote the adoption of passwordless authentication. Leading tech companies (Microsoft, Google) and industry wide initiatives are developing better architectures and practices to bring it to wider use, with many taking a cautious approach, keeping passwords behind the scenes in some use cases. The development of open standards such as
FIDO2 and
WebAuthn has further generated adoption of passwordless technologies such as
Windows Hello. On June 24, 2020,
Apple Safari announced that
Face ID or
Touch ID would be available as a WebAuthn platform authenticator for passwordless login. ==Mechanism==