#PassKey
Windows 11 now supports some 3rd party Passkey apps natively.

In Settings navigate to Accounts, select Passkeys then click Advanced Options

techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windows...
November 12, 2025 at 3:39 AM
I love a passkey!!! would you like to add a passkey? YES. login? passkey? easy. one click. incredible.
November 12, 2025 at 5:39 AM
when you gotta sign into Google and it gives you that Passkey stare
November 8, 2025 at 4:54 AM
But, but, but passkeys will solve everything! Of course, first you have to login to your phone, where all the passkeys are locked up, including the passkey you need to unlock your phone...
November 7, 2025 at 7:55 PM
Damn it Apple, please stop with this passkey shit. I don’t want to use it for every app, nor any app. Stop stop stop
November 11, 2025 at 6:05 PM
Geen idee of Android het ook heeft, maar bless de passkey functie van Apple
November 12, 2025 at 7:55 AM
ich hab nochmal gecheckt -- mir wird die ganze zeit weißgemacht, ich hätte eine email bekommen, wo ich die nutzungsbedingungen hätte bestätigen müssen

ich habe nirgendwo eine solch email (auch nicht im papierkorb, nur 15 emails zum passkey der nicht funktioniert hat)

ich. grrrr
die größte clownerei ist btw dass bro von der vermittlung mir gestern keinen profilcode geben wollte weil mein leistungsanspruch ja noch nicht garantiert ist

aber ich den antrag dafür nicht fertig machen oder dokumente nachreichen kann

ohne profil

merkste selber irgendwo neh
pov: du bist im jobcenter explizit für schwerbehinderung und denkst dir "ah, dann wird das ja barrierefrei sein"

du musst in den vierten stock

der aufzug ist nicht zugänglich

keine pointe danke für nichts jungs
November 10, 2025 at 9:23 AM
We already heard there was a passkey, but the lovk was changed.

Does this timeline lack lockpicking technology?

#BlindSpot #NoirAlley #TCMParty
November 9, 2025 at 6:02 AM
fühle das mit dem passkey massiv
November 10, 2025 at 9:42 AM
Windows 11 expands passkey manager support: Windows is committed to making sign-in simpler, quicker, and more secure for every user. Today, we’re excited to announce a major step forward in passwordless authentication: native support for passkey managers in Windows 11. This new… #WindowsITPro
Windows 11 expands passkey manager support
Windows is committed to making sign-in simpler, quicker, and more secure for every user. Today, we’re excited to announce a major step forward in passwordless authentication: native support for passkey managers in Windows 11. This new capability empowers users to choose their favorite passkey manager — whether it’s Microsoft Password Manager or trusted third-party providers. It’s generally available with the Windows November 2025 security update. By partnering closely with third-party managers, we’re delivering a more flexible, secure, and intuitive experience for Windows users everywhere, starting with 1Password today and other passkey managers coming soon.  “Working alongside the Windows Security team on the development of the passkey plugin API for Windows 11 has been a rewarding partnership. As the first password manager to offer native passkey support in Windows 11, we’re proud to give customers a seamless passwordless experience inside and outside the browser. Together, we’ve ensured that 1Password and other third-party passkey providers can deliver a secure, standards-based experience natively on Windows, marking another major step towards a passwordless future.” - Travis Hogan, End User Group Product Manager, 1Password Why plugin passkey managers? Passkeys are phish-resistant, less vulnerable to data breaches, and easier and faster to use than passwords. With plugin passkey manager support, you get: * Choice and flexibility: Use your preferred passkey manager natively on Windows. * Easy authentication: Create and sign in with passkeys using Windows Hello. * Passkeys everywhere: Your passkeys are synced between your Windows PCs and mobile devices. They go where you go. Saving a passkey to 1Password Easier authentication, with Windows Hello With plugin passkey manager support, packaged credential managers can integrate directly into Windows. Users can save, manage, and use passkeys across browsers and native apps — thanks to the new plugin provider capability. Setting up your credential manager is part of the passkey creation flow. Authentication uses Windows Hello — whether that is PIN, face, or fingerprint — so only you can access your credentials. Microsoft Password Manager We’ve integrated Microsoft Password Manager from Microsoft Edge natively into Windows as a plugin. That means you can use it in Microsoft Edge, other browsers, or any app that supports passkeys. Saving a passkey to the Microsoft Password Manager plugin on Windows This integration of Microsoft Password Manager from Microsoft Edge comes with added security benefits: * Passkey operations (creation, authentication, and management) are protected by Windows Hello. * Passkeys stored in Microsoft Password Manager will be synced and available on other Windows devices where the user is logged into Microsoft Edge with the same Microsoft account. * Syncing is protected by your Microsoft Password Manager PIN and a cloud enclave solution. * Azure Managed Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) help protect encryption keys. * Sensitive operations are performed inside a hardware-isolated environment in Azure Confidential Compute.  * There is tamper-proof recovery with Azure Confidential Ledger. In other words, your passkeys are securely stored and easy to use. Securing the present, innovating for the future Join us as we build a passwordless future - one passkey at a time. Security is a shared responsibility. Through collaboration across hardware and software ecosystems, we can build more resilient systems that are secured by design and by default, from Windows to the cloud, enabling trust at every layer of the digital experience. The updated Windows 11 Security Book and Windows Server 2025 Security Book are great tools to help you understand how to stay more secure with Windows. Learn more about Windows 11, Windows Server, and Copilot+ PCs. To learn more about Microsoft Security Solutions, visit our website.  Bookmark the Microsoft Security Blog to keep up with our expert coverage on security matters. Also, follow Microsoft Security on LinkedIn and @MSFTSecurity on X for the latest news and updates on cybersecurity.  --- Continue the conversation. Find best practices. Bookmark the Windows Tech Community, then follow us @MSWindowsITPro on X and on LinkedIn. Looking for support? Visit Windows on Microsoft Q&A.
bit.ly
November 11, 2025 at 7:06 PM
Small quality-of-life improvement to the login page:

If you log into WhatPulse with another platform or passkey, the login page will now remind you of which one you've used last time 🫶
November 8, 2025 at 7:42 AM
Did you know that Passkeys are a new way to log into your #Bnet account? This article explains how to set up a Passkey on your account: blizz.ly/493QKVL
How Do I Setup A Passkey
Information on how to setup a passkey
blizz.ly
November 6, 2025 at 12:00 AM
November 9, 2025 at 6:46 PM
I was willing to forgive the devs for being a bit rough around the edges and missing some features I want like Less Bad passkey creation UX, batch-editing tools, and folder tags, but drinking the LLM koolaid with no remorse makes me wish they would just fuck off the internet forever.
November 8, 2025 at 3:22 AM
"In '79, Morton won a grant to take photos at a psychiatric hospital in LA. Project was intended to last a few weeks and produce marketing materials that could be used to recruit volunteers to spend time w/ patients.
But Morton was issued a passkey that allowed him to visit when admins werent around
A Photographer Spent 18 Months Documenting an LA Psychiatric Hospital in the 1970s
What he found was deeply unsettling.
petapixel.com
November 6, 2025 at 9:33 PM
Profoundly sick of 1Password making me open up my phone and scam a damn QR code for a passkey instead of using Touch ID on my MacBook.
November 7, 2025 at 6:18 PM
I fucking hate Health Equity no I am not downloading your fucking app and giving some random ass company my picture and drivers license so you can create a “passkey” instead of TFA like a normal fucking person.
November 4, 2025 at 9:19 PM
I want it to be easier to create test passkeys for testing auth that depends on them. So I built "test-passkey":

github.com/kettanaito/...

A tiny, extremely simple utility that produces test passkeys bound to "rpId" ready to be stored on the client and on the server. Check it out
GitHub - kettanaito/test-passkey: Create WebAuthn Passkeys for testing your applications.
Create WebAuthn Passkeys for testing your applications. - kettanaito/test-passkey
github.com
November 3, 2025 at 9:01 PM
I have yet to read anything on any website that clearly and simply explains to me why I would want to switch to a passkey from my password.

(DO NOT TRY TO EXPLAIN THIS TO ME. This is not a request.)
November 7, 2025 at 1:43 AM
Yeah, in the day job we regard emailing as a massive no-no, SMS is a last resort. Passkey/FiDO/webauthn with biometrics and/or device binding is the current king.
November 6, 2025 at 4:07 AM
Cosplaying that you're in a spy movie isn't going to make you secure. Not getting phished, having a tool that tells you that the email address with your counterpart's name isn't actually an address they use, and locking down with a passkey is going to do a lot more than the charlatans at Proton.
November 4, 2025 at 2:53 PM
Solo sois tú, tú teléfono y tú dedo. La contraseña pues queda de "plan b" o la desactivas (aunque entonces mejor mira como copiar a otro dispositivo la passkey)
November 4, 2025 at 9:06 AM
It already happened to me before. I can't remember the passkey I had for Keepass. I was only able to recover a few accounts. 😅

Problem is, if you add another layer (a backup), it's another open opportunity for leaks. 😂 No easy way other than to keep our brain optimally healthy!
November 4, 2025 at 11:31 PM