Face ID and Fingerprints Are Finally Replacing “123456”—Here’s What Changes Next
World Password Day quietly died this month—rebranded by Microsoft as World Passkey Day. The company says it’s registering almost a million passkeys every 24 hours and sees a 98 % login-success rate, compared with 32 % for passwords.
Google made the same move late last year, turning on passkeys for its three-billion-user base by default. Apple, for its part, has supported passkeys across iOS, macOS, and iPadOS since 2023 and syncs them through iCloud Keychain. Apple Support
“Typing a password is officially a fallback, not a feature.” — Andrew Shikiar, executive director, FIDO Alliance
Why passkeys beat passwords
| Benefit | What it means for you |
|---|---|
| Phishing-proof | The private key never leaves your phone or laptop, so fake sites can’t steal it. |
| One-tap sign-in | Your face scan or fingerprint unlocks everything—no more SMS codes. |
| Auto-sync | Lose your phone and the keys restore from iCloud, Google Password Manager, or a hardware token. |
How to switch in under five minutes
- Google → Security ▸ Passkeys ▸ “Create a passkey.”
- Microsoft → Settings ▸ Advanced security ▸ “Enable passkey sign-in.”
- Apple ID → Sign in on a supported site or app and choose “Create Passkey.”
Tip: Once a passkey exists, delete the old password in your account dashboard to shut the back door.
The fine print (for now)
- Older sites still ask for passwords; keep a manager or use “Sign-in with Apple/Google.”
- Shared accounts (family streaming logins) need separate passkeys per person—no more texting the Netflix password.
- Device-loss anxiety is real, but recovery flows now rely on biometrics + a phone number, not security questions.
Bottom line
We’re not quite at a password funeral, but the eulogy is drafted. If you set up a new account anywhere in 2025, odds are the site will steer you to a passkey first—and that’s a security upgrade even the laziest internet user can live with.



