PayPal gets Passkey support on iPhone, iPad, Mac in U.S.

Posted:
in iOS edited October 2022
PayPal is enabling support for Passkeys, a new standard for authentication that will enable iPhone, iPad, and Mac users to log in to the payment service without needing a password.

PayPal Passkey on an iPhone
PayPal Passkey on an iPhone


Announced on Monday, support for Passkeys will be enabled for PayPal accounts. The change will add a new log-in option that will permit access to an account in a password-less but secure manner.

Under the change, owners of iPhones, iPads, and Macs will be able to set up Passkeys initially to access PayPal.com, with the company planning to expand to other platforms as the standard gains momentum.

Passkeys, created as a standard by the FIDO Alliance and the World Wide Web Consortium, uses cryptographic keys associated with a device to confirm an identity. Once set up, a user could log in to their PayPal account using Face ID or Touch ID, without a password being entered or shared over the Internet.

The benefits of Passkeys include a heightened level of security, more confidence that the correct user is signing in instead of an impostor, and a removal of a need to use or maintain a password. It is even possible to sync a Passkey with the iCloud Keychain, extending it to other Apple devices.

PayPal is rolling out Passkey support to all U.S. customers from today, with other countries set to get it in early 2023.

"Launching passkeys for PayPal is foundational to our commitment to offering our customers safe, secure and easy ways to access and manage their daily financial lives," said Doug Bland, SVP and GM, Head of Consumer, PayPal. "We are excited to provide our customers a more seamless checkout experience that eliminates the risks of weak and reused credentials and removes the frustration of remembering a password. We are making it easier for customers to shop online."

To set up a Passkey with PayPal, users must be using iOS 16, iPadOS 16, or macOS Ventura. After logging into the PayPal website in a browser using existing credentials, there will be an option to "Create a passkey."

The user is then prompted to authenticate with Face ID or Touch ID. The Passkey is then created and saved, so the user won't need to use the password the next time they log in.

Users who do set up a Passkey can still log in with it on other devices that don't support the standard natively. Instead, users will be prompted to scan a QR code that will appear after entering their user ID.

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 7
    F PayPal and the Nazi who owns it. 
    danoxbyronl
  • Reply 2 of 7
    JP234 said:
    It's going to be an enormous hassle to update all our myriad passwords to Passkeys, but the added security will be worth it.

    We may do the financial and medical stuff as soon as our vendors adopt Passkey, and do the rest as we log in to their sites.
    Would be nice if Apple or third party offered a tool to migrate all passwords to Passkey. 
  • Reply 3 of 7
    danoxdanox Posts: 3,285member
    F PayPal and the Nazi who owns it. 
    PayPal or Google Pay never….
  • Reply 4 of 7
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,679member
    Would love to see AppleInsider do an overview of Passkey with a compare and contrast to the various authentication apps, hardware keys, and other 2FA/MFA options. I feel like anyone who’s not a dedicated security professional investing time, effort, and money (e.g., hardware keys) into trying to come up with a workable solution today is at risk of spinning their wheels at best and locking themselves out of accounts at worst if they don’t have a clearer picture of the pros/cons of all of the competing solutions.

    The fact that PayPal is signing up to support Passkey is potentially a good thing, whether you like PayPal or not, because they have a huge user base and will help move the Passkey initiative along. But I’m still not sure where the whole industry is headed because it all seems so fragmented right now on both the tools side and the support side. This probably isn’t something that’s going to resolve itself even in the next 5 years, but I’d like to have some level of confidence that whatever I invest my time, effort, and money into isn’t going to be a waste.
    edited October 2022 starof80watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 7
    I just closed 2 PayPal accounts. 

    Bye bye. 
    byronl
  • Reply 6 of 7
    chadbagchadbag Posts: 2,023member
    dewme said:
    Would love to see AppleInsider do an overview of Passkey with a compare and contrast to the various authentication apps, hardware keys, and other 2FA/MFA options. I feel like anyone who’s not a dedicated security professional investing time, effort, and money (e.g., hardware keys) into trying to come up with a workable solution today is at risk of spinning their wheels at best and locking themselves out of accounts at worst if they don’t have a clearer picture of the pros/cons of all of the competing solutions.

    The fact that PayPal is signing up to support Passkey is potentially a good thing, whether you like PayPal or not, because they have a huge user base and will help move the Passkey initiative along. But I’m still not sure where the whole industry is headed because it all seems so fragmented right now on both the tools side and the support side. This probably isn’t something that’s going to resolve itself even in the next 5 years, but I’d like to have some level of confidence that whatever I invest my time, effort, and money into isn’t going to be a waste.
    Apple itself did an overview video a year or two ago at WWDC when it was first announced as a developmental direction.  It is informative 
    watto_cobra
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