![]() And you’ll find the steps to enable security keys in Azure AD. It will automatically use the last registered FIDO2 identity on the token.įor the people who aren’t yet familiar with going passwordless with FIDO2 security keys, below is some more information regarding going passwordless. If you take the same token and use it to log on to a Windows 10 PC, it does not give you an option of which identity to use. If you enroll multiple identities with a FIDO2 token, it will allow you to pick which identity to use when doing web authentication. No need to remember a username and password. Then it’s only a matter of inserting the FIDO key and choose the account to sign in to. When we enable security key sign-in for these tenants (even if we only do that to start with for these IT admin accounts), we can stop using all these user accounts and passwords and go passwordless. Passwords are often forgotten for tenants which are not accessed regularly. That’s a hell of a job to keep these passwords separate and to remember. To keep everything secure, for every tenant a separate password is used. People with a production and dev tenant (like me). IT staff who work for a service provider might have a long list of admin accounts with passwords to access the client’s tenants. Some people might have access to multiple Office 365 accounts. ![]() Fortunately, we can use a key for multiple accounts! ![]() We don’t have to purchase a separate key for every Azure tenant we access. Today a short article to make people aware that a FIDO2 security key isn’t tied to one Azure AD/ Office 365 account.
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