> I want to be able to share passwords for accounts with my family
No you don't, you want to share access, and the only way you can do it with passwords is by sharing the password itself. With passkeys you can have each person register their own passkey.
They can "control" them in any meaningful way if they use them for access of things that you do not allow or denies access for things that you do allow. If neither are happening, then you're effectively the one controlling, not them.
The specific issue at hand is sharing. With passwords, I can easily share my passwords. Is it easy to share passkeys? And could doing so be prevented by Microsoft?
The point of passkeys is that you can have many of them unlike a single password. Each device should have its own passkey that I can revoke if my device is lost.
Does the Passkey-enabled account support multiple passkeys?
I'm pretty sure I have my Android phone setup with a passkey for my Google account and also my Windows laptop.
Presuambly the same logic applies for a service that permits multiple passkeys. Each person would register a passkey on their device using the shared credential.
> Does the Passkey-enabled account support multiple passkeys?
There in lies the issue. With passwords, it doesn't matter if the account supports multiple passwords. I can share the one I have
> Presuambly the same logic applies for a service that permits multiple passkeys. Each person would register a passkey on their device using the shared credential.
but can I simply share the passkeys without someone's permission (other than my own)?
How does that differ from each person having their own password? Right now, if the service only allows for a single login (username/password), then is there a reason to believe it would allow multiple people to have different passkeys?
Plus that doesn't really address allowing someone else in your family to log into your account "temporarily"; ie if you want them to check something for you.
Yes I do, don't put words in people's mouth. I want to share passwords (not access) with my family so they can authenticate into services without the service provider being able to tell who is accessing it.
No you don't, you want to share access, and the only way you can do it with passwords is by sharing the password itself. With passkeys you can have each person register their own passkey.