It
is confirmed folks; Google is indeed testing a new way of signing into your
Google account without typing in the password. Those who have been
invited, and the number is limited, log in by responding to a notification
that is sent to their respective smartphone. The idea is somewhat similar to
the Yahoo’s ‘Account Key’.
More after the cut.
Why
do this? Well, while some of us take passwords seriously and make sure
they are hard to crack, others really don’t pay much attention to it thus
making passwords being the weakest part of the link when it comes to securing
users’ accounts. Two-step authentication is being used but it is mostly
considered a hassle and a delay in logging in to your account. On the
other hand, this new option speeds things up; type your email and hit enter,
you get a notification on smartphone confirming if it is indeed you trying to
login via some other device and all you need to do is to tap ‘yes’ and
you’re in. The feature would be really handy to those who always keep their
smartphone with them and those who have complicated passwords that might prove
to be a burden when it comes to remembering them and typing them again and
again.
The first
report of the test surfaced when the Reddit user Rohit Paul mentioned it and it
was then reported online by other sources as well. As per Paul, an email
invitation was sent to him asking if he wanted to a join test group that was
being given the access to this new technology. The group is called ‘Sign-In
Experiments at Google’ and although it is public, you can’t view or participate
without receiving a direct invitation. According to a Google’ spokesperson,
“We’ve invited a small group of users to help test a new way to sign-in to
their Google accounts, no password required. ‘Pizza’, ‘password’ and
‘123456’—your days are numbered.”
The participants have been told that they can
also use their passwords to sign in as well if they wish to do so. Google
further states that it might ask for the password of the users as an additional
security measure if it notices something unusual about the login attempt. In
case your smartphone is lost or stolen, the screen lock will protect your
private data and you can sign in to your account by typing in your password and
then removing the account access from the device that was stolen/lost.
Google further told the testers that they can turn this
feature off whenever then want and can also leave the trial group if they wish
to. Google has yet not commented on when it will be expanding the service to
more people. The good thing is that this feature works on both iOS and Android
as of now.




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