Podcast
Root Causes 230: What Is Apple Passkey?


Hosted by
Tim Callan
Chief Compliance Officer
Jason Soroko
Fellow
Original broadcast date
June 30, 2022
Apple recently announced its Passkey functionality, which will allow passwordless authentication between Apple devices and supporting web services through key exchange. In this episode we discuss how this works, the user experience, the significance of FIDO and WebAuthn, and implications for consumer-facing sites.
Podcast Transcript
Lightly edited for flow and brevity.
What’s important about that, what’s really important about that is the adoption of the standard, to be first class citizen within the operating systems of these big companies, is a good thing because it’s a first step toward real mass adoption of passwordless rather than this world we have been living in which is a real mix of things including various kinds of MFA and stuff like that, along with, of course, a password, which is always at the core. What we should do also is in future podcasts get really into depth about what it is. I think for now I want to talk about the industry implication and the implication to the consumer cause that’s what we’re really talking about here. A lot of times, you and I, Tim, we’re talking about enterprise-level authentication, and I think what is really different here is getting passwordless mass adopted by the public, the average user, people who are just going to websites and doing their thing.This is what’s important.
Therefore, you’re not entering a password, but how are you saying, it’s me? And, of course, if somebody physically gets a hold of your machine, your device, how is that being protected, and I think this is going to be the real emergence. Not that it hasn’t emerged already, people are very used to using it. But I want people to make sure that they are being very clear about what’s happening here. What used to be, in the most simplistic sense, like a PIN; in other words, there’s some credential like a certificate, let’s say, in a certificate-based authentication where sometimes if you wanted to authenticate with that certificate, you might be challenged to enter a PIN code, and that obviously is not sexy, and it looks a bit like a password. One thing that’s available, especially on a lot of modern devices, is some form of biometric, and quite often, that’s now a measurement of your face. Don’t think about that as anything other than, alright, there is a key pair, which is the credential that is doing the logging in, and you are in possession of the key material that’s necessary on your device to be able to do this authentication, and you registered within the system. Go ahead, Tim.
Then the other thing you would think is obviously they need to support devices. There are some legacy device support required. So, this wouldn’t be an all or nothing there would be people who came in that are banking on their old device that before that that I’m still going to let them log in the traditional way.

