Appleâs latest iPhone software update, iOS 18, arrives today and includes a new app: Passwords. For the first time, Apple is taking your phoneâs ability to save login details and putting them in a standalone app. It could help improve millions of peopleâs terrible passwords.
After years of being told you should create unique, strong passwords for every website and app you use, you probably fall into a couple of camps. People that are fully signed-up to the password manager life, or those still using â123456â on every other website.
Appleâs new encrypted Passwords app is automatically included with iOS 18 and is a public-facing evolution of its Keychain and password-saving capabilities. The Keychain, which has existed for more than a decade, no longer has as prominent a home in the iPhoneâs settings, and details previously saved there are being moved to the new app.
The launch of the password manager app, which will also be available on MacOS Sequoia and iPadOS 18, may help improve peopleâs relationships with their passwords but also could, to varying degrees, challenge existing password managers.
âThis move makes the app more visible to lay users and informs them about this secure method to store and manage passwords,â says Talal Haj Bakry and Tommy Mysk from security company Mysk. âYou have a default password manager pre-installed on your device and provides end-to-end encryption when syncing data across devices.â
New Passwords
The Passwords app has a pretty barebones design. Six different tiles are presented when you open the app on an iPhone: All, Passkeys, Codes, Wi-Fi, Security, and Deleted. These are essentially the main functions of the app, allowing you to save each type of data within their relevant sections. The security section includes check-ups allowing weak and exposed passwords to be identified.
âThis will definitely boost the adoption of this pre-installed app and bolster user security,â Bakry and Mysk say. They add it presents the saved data âin a more organized way than the Settings app.â
Apple says the Passwords app uses end-to-end encryption to save your details, meaning nobody, not even Apple, knows what you have saved. Within the app, you can search for login details to your entries and set up groups to share passwords with other people.
Your saved login details are synced across Apple devices using iCloud, meaning the encrypted data is shared with Appleâs cloud servers and available on all of your Apple devices. Within Appleâs settings, you can turn off syncing passwords on a specific device. The app is locked using FaceID.
When using the Passwords app, any details you have previously saved in Keychain or AutoFill will be moved across to the new location. This includes if you have used the Sign in with Apple login system on any websites or apps. It is unclear why Apple has decided to spin its Keychain system into a fully fledged password manager now, although the company has been building out the individual features over a number of years. (Apple has not responded to WIREDâs request for comment at the time of writing).