![]() ![]() To sign in at another time, you’ll select “sign-in with passkey,” then pull the sign-in credentials directly from Dashlane. Using your fingerprint, you can then save the passkey directly to Dashlane. If you’re signing up for an app for the first time, you’ll enter your email address, then the app will ask for you to save a passkey. Should all go smoothly, the way this all works should be very easy for the user, but quite complex on the backend. Introduced in the Android 14 Developer Preview, the major change is that Android will allow users to sync passkeys to 3rd-party apps and not only the native Google Password Manager. For apps and the web in general, passkeys are seen as the future, set to replace passwords. Dashlane announced late last week that thanks to Android 14, passkey support is coming soon. ![]()
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