Google doesn’t want you to log into an app or website ever again

TECHi's Author Chastity Mansfield
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Chastity Mansfield
Chastity Mansfield
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Anyone who has to juggle multiple accounts across numerous apps and websites knows how useful password managers can be, and if you don’t, then I sincerely recommend you try one out. If you’re an Android users, however, it may be worth your while to just wait for Google to release its new Smart Lock for Passwords, which is expected to release alongside Android M. This password manager basically makes it so that you’ll never have to log into an app or website on your smartphone again, as Google will do all the work for you. 

Androidauthority

Androidauthority

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One of the new features coming along Android M that Google chose not to highlight during the keynote yesterday is a password manager called Smart Lock for Passwords. Here’s how it works. When you first sign into an app that supports Smart Lock for Passwords, your device will ask if you want to save the credentials into Smart Lock. If you chose yes, the credentials will be stored online and the next time you need to log into the respective app, you will be logged in automatically with zero effort on your side. And that goes for any device on which you are signed in with your Google account. Log into Netflix one time on your smartphone and then never have to type a password again on your tablet or Android TV. And this works with Chrome as well, so saving your credentials in the desktop browser will make them available for apps on your mobile device, and vice versa. Speaking of Netflix, the video service is one of the handful of apps that already integrate the feature, along with The New York Times, Instacart, Orbitz, and Eventbrite. Smart Lock won’t work with any app, the way LastPass attempts to do. Developers will have to integrate the feature into their app using Google’s Credential API. That looks like a fairly simple process, however, and we can see this feature really taking off in the future.

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