Starting with iOS 17, iPadOS 17, and macOS Sonoma, users with an Apple ID will automatically be assigned a passkey, allowing them to sign into their Apple ID with Face ID or Touch ID instead of their password.
Starting with iOS 17, iPadOS 17, and macOS Sonoma, users with an Apple ID will automatically be assigned a passkey, allowing them to sign into their Apple ID with Face ID or Touch ID instead of their password.
Comment from the MacRumors forum, in case you’re hoping it’ll solve the problem Joanna Stern reported on:
It’s a hack but the work around to that is to set a screen time passcode, and disable the ability to modify the account in content and privacy restrictions. Setting this passcode to something other than your main code should help against those who know/spy upon your main code.
Since I can’t think of a reason you’d be constantly accessing your iCloud account info - especially in public - this isn’t that much of an inconvenience, and limits anyone’s ability to discover this code.
The only issue is remembering to re-enable the content restrictions when you’re done with whatever you needed to unlock it for. But the same can be said for any manual lock.
Sad news: ATP shared the same trick a few months ago and received feedback that it’s easy to work around:
AFAIK the best advice we can give people is to set a strong device passcode and never use it in a public space. Always use FaceID, and have “Require Attention” toggled on.