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Microsoft has announced that it will discontinue the password storage and autofill feature in the Authenticator app starting in July and will complete the deprecation in August 2025.
Microsoft is phasing out the password management feature in its Authenticator app, urging users to back up their saved passwords immediately. This functionality will be transferred to the Edge ...
Microsoft is moving toward a password-less future. As part of that shift, it no longer wants the Authenticator app to handle ...
Option two involves saving your existing passwords with Microsoft Edge. So, if you've been procrastinating on migrating your passwords or setting up a passkey, you're almost out of time.
Using passkeys is a safer alternative to the risky password habits 49% of US adults use, according to CNET's password survey.
The only type of passkeys that Microsoft currently supports are device-bound (non-syncable) passkeys. Here's what that means for you and your credential management plans.
Microsoft says users can access their passwords and addresses directly through Microsoft Edge, which will now be the primary platform for password storage and management.
Starting tomorrow, Microsoft Authenticator will delete your passwords and move them to Edge. It will store passkeys, though. If you haven't backed them up and moved to a password manager, here's ...
Microsoft announced that a new Edge feature allowing employees to share passwords more securely in enterprise environments has reached general availability.