16 October, 2015
Yahoo Mail Upgrade Sheds Passwords
Yahoo on Thursday set out to make
its free email service hip again with upgrades that included getting rid of the
need for passwords on mobile devices. Yahoo new email application allows users
to sign-in without passwords, which have long been lambasted as paltry defense
mechanisms by security specialists. The Yahoo Mail sign-in process called
Account Key allows the option of having a message sent to a user’s smartphone
asking for confirmation that access should be granted online.
“Passwords are difficult to
remember and secondary sign-in verification is inconvenient and confusing,”
Yahoo vice president of product management Dylan Casey said in a release. ‘We’re
now taking a major leap towards a password-free future with the launch of Yahoo
Account Key, which uses push notifications to give users simple and secure
access using their mobile device.” The feature comes nearly two years after
hackers slipped into Yahoo Mail accounts to loot information using stolen
passwords.
A malicious computer program
armed with Yahoo Mail passwords and usernames apparently slipped into accounts
aiming to glean names and addresses from messages that had been sent. “Security
attacks are unfortunately becoming a more regular occurrence,” Yahoo senior
vice president for platforms and personalization products Jay Rossiter said at
the time that cyber attacks were “becoming a more regular occurence.”
Rival Web-based email service
providers such as Google have encouraged people to use “two-factor
authentication” that calls for passwords to be backed up by something else,
such as codes sent to smartphones in text messages, in order to get into
accounts.
Yahoo has said it hopes to phase
out passwords to make email more secure, while adding improved encryption.
– Moving on mobile –
New Yahoo Mail software, which
the California-based Internet-pioneer said marked the 18th anniversary of the
free service, also let users manage Outlook, Hotmail, or AOL email from inside
Yahoo accounts. Yahoo Mail apps tailored for mobile devices powered by Apple or
Android software boasted smarter search and contact management capabilities as
well. “Mobile use requires a faster and smarter inbox,” said Jeff Bonforte,
senior vice president of communication products at Yahoo. “Both of these needs
are at the center of our new app.”
Versions of the new Yahoo Mail
app began rolling out on Thursday as capabilities were added to the service
accessed from desktop computers. Yahoo chief executive Marissa Mayer has made a
priority of keeping the company in tune with mobile Internet lifestyles. Making
Yahoo Mail a preferred option could help put the company at the center of
people’s daily routines.
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