Criterion sc1
Increasing practical day-to-day sign-in usability for typical users when products make passkeys the default.
Null: When products make passkeys the default, this would have no relevant impact on practical day-to-day sign-in usability for typical users.
No linked atoms.
When products make passkeys the default, this would increase practical day-to-day sign-in usability mildly because many users can approve access with familiar device biometrics, even though some flows remain somewhat cumbersome.
| Atom | Weight |
|---|---|
| Passkeys are unlocked using device biometric methods such as Face ID or fingerprint scanning, similar to those used for Apple Pay and phone unlocking. | 0.284ω=0.88 |
| Password-manager applications are widely used and often require users to copy-paste passwords, but can suffer from field-recognition failures and mismatched or differing URLs. | 0.116ω=0.55 |
When products make passkeys the default, this would increase practical day-to-day sign-in usability moderately because routine authentication is often simpler than typing, storing, or pasting passwords and avoids many password-manager field and URL problems.
| Atom | Weight |
|---|---|
| Passkeys are unlocked using device biometric methods such as Face ID or fingerprint scanning, similar to those used for Apple Pay and phone unlocking. | 0.474ω=0.88 |
| Password-manager applications are widely used and often require users to copy-paste passwords, but can suffer from field-recognition failures and mismatched or differing URLs. | 0.199ω=0.55 |
| Support for passkeys in web browsers and progressive web apps varies by device and browser implementation. | -0.189ω=0.85 |
| Passkeys can replace separate two-factor authentication by incorporating the second factor into the credential, making 2FA obsolete. | 0.152ω=0.70 |
When products make passkeys the default, this would increase practical day-to-day sign-in usability strongly because most routine sign-ins become almost the same interaction as phone unlocking or Apple Pay and remove most password-entry friction.
| Atom | Weight |
|---|---|
| Passkeys are unlocked using device biometric methods such as Face ID or fingerprint scanning, similar to those used for Apple Pay and phone unlocking. | 0.704ω=0.88 |
| Support for passkeys in web browsers and progressive web apps varies by device and browser implementation. | -0.297ω=0.85 |
| Password-manager applications are widely used and often require users to copy-paste passwords, but can suffer from field-recognition failures and mismatched or differing URLs. | 0.278ω=0.55 |
| Passkeys can replace separate two-factor authentication by incorporating the second factor into the credential, making 2FA obsolete. | 0.241ω=0.70 |
| Passwords are the de facto standard authentication method today, but they are vulnerable to attacks and considered less secure than passkeys. | 0.217ω=0.85 |
| Native apps distributed via app stores can implement passkey authentication with full control, bypassing browser integration constraints. | 0.175ω=0.85 |