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Google plans to start out testing the primary version of its password-killing Project Abacus with banking apps next month and can create the tools offered to each humanoid developer by the top of the year, the corporate same.
First previewed throughout last year's I/O developer conference, Project Abacus is Google's Advanced Technology and comes (ATAP) group's bold attempt to eliminate passwords. instead of exploitation passwords to verify your identity, Abacus uses device knowledge from your phone to verify your identity.
"We have a phone and these phones have of these sensors in them, why couldn’t it simply apprehend World Health Organization i used to be thus I don’t would like a countersign, I ought to simply be ready to work," ATAP head Dan George S. Kaufman same throughout a session at I/O Friday.
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To help achieve that goal, Google is working on a new developer API called the Trust API, which will allows app makers to tap into this data — including things like your location and facial recognition — in order to verify your identity. "What we’re going to be able to do with this is get rid of the awkwardness of second factor authentication,” Kaufman said.
Google plans to begin testing the API with "several large financial institutions" beginning in June and — provided the tests go well — will make the API widely available to Android developers by the end of the year.
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