Back in the old times, on the sites I log in regularly, my browser filled in both username and password. I clicked “Log in” once, and I was set to go.
But no more. Now it’s all first a username, then a password. From what I saw, Apple started this many years ago, but now this bother really spread. And it’s not like I can just double-click on the same screen area, oh no. Animations make sure that I have to wait several hundred milliseconds before the password field is there, and depending on the site, I even have to select from my browser, which login I want to use, twice!
Why, oh why?
All my screens are really big enough to display 2 text fields. What are arguments for this behavior? I don’t see any.
A lot of services these days support multiple forms of authentication. Did you sign up with a separate password? Did you use Google or Facebook auth? Is this a corporate account where auth is via their SSO? They don’t even know whether they should ask for your password until they know who you are.
That’s the best explanation I heard so far.
As someone who just built one of these, that is the exact reason we did it.
It would be cool if users just remembered which service they used to sign in, but they often don’t, so this is the next best thing. Tell us your email, we look up which service you used, then send you to that service to complete the login.
Pro tip: leave the password field on the site but make it invisible. So when I am using my password manager to fill in the username, the password field will be filled out too. And I don’t have to use my password manager twice for one login.
1Password actually is really good at handling these two step login screens, for me it always autofills the password correctly
So far Bitwarden has been doing great for me, too.
1Password is great, I just switched to it recently after the LastPass kerfuffle and the UX is lightyears better
Yes please! I’m a web developer but not being able to autofill passwords pisses me off to no end.
This is the answer. I’ve had to build it a handful of times and it always feels bad.
So exposing information about users (how they log in) without authenticating that you’re someone authorized to have that information?
The better way to do this is to just have “log in with Google” or whatever buttons.
As I mentioned elsewhere in the thread, most users don’t remember what they used when they created the account, particularly if it’s something they don’t use often. It’s also cumbersome to have to input that, especially if you bundle that with an optional password field.
That’s not to say you don’t have a point about leaking that information. Personally I’d be more concerned about leaking the fact that I have an account at all. If this is a concern for you, you are likely not inclined to use the likes of Google Auth or Facebook Auth. You’d be better off using a unique password for each service, store them in some sort of password manager, and rely on the default behavior treating “local account” and “no account” the same in terms of showing you the password field.
Maybe that’s not your preferred behavior, but it does allow you to keep that data private while simultaneously being easier to use for the SSO users.
And it’s impossible to provide for all these options on one screen, with either a password field that some users ignore or some kind of option selection that either hides or shows it?
I wouldn’t mind the separate pages for username / password if the “remember me on this device” checkbox weren’t fucking useless 99% of the time.
Oh yes.
That probably is not covered by the functional cookies that’s the maximum which I allow any site.
Is it ever not useless?
Microsoft:
Stay signed in?
This will decrease how many login prompts you see.
⬜ Remember on this device
No Yes Why isn’t the checkbox implied if I press Yes?
It’s useless for me too but I’m sure it’s Safari defaulting cookies to session only rather than the time range the website wants.
I’m fine with that, autofill takes care of it anyway.
Similarly, platforms that default to a massive CREATE AN ACCOUNT box centered on the screen and make you play Where’s Fucking Waldo trying to find the size 8 “Log In” hyperlink.
Because new signups are more valuable than existing users.
That, plus the majority of users seeing the login screen are probably new. At least, unless it’s one of those annoying sites that makes you log in every single time.
I think it’s due to single sign on (SSO) or other means of authentication (OAUTH), which is convenient when used.
But I agree, annoying if you use username and password.
Nowadays it is possible to set up many services in such a way that you authenticate in a different way from a password, for example with an app on a smartphone. Such services can’t ask you for your password until you have told them what account you want to log into because it might turn out you have to give them something other than a password.
yeah i noticed this as well. extremely annoying, i’m sick of UX getting shittier and more annoying for the vague promise of ‘security’. having to get my phone out to login to youtube is a fucking downgrade, plain and simple.
It started as defense against credential stuffing and a speed bump against brute force attacks. Not only is it additional loads for a bot to do, but passive captcha can be put between the steps. Now I think its becoming fashionable.
Brute force attacks through web interface cannot be a real thing. Performance is much too bad to get anywhere even in great scenarios, plus its be simple to defend against.
But even if, web automation tools don’t need to be bothered by separating input fields. In the end one request is sent anyway.
This is a ux thing.
Federation. Your email address could either be local creds, or federated with google, Microsoft, Facebook, Apple, etc.
When you submit your email address, it determines how you will be authenticating when you submit it.
That could be done after the user enters both the email/username and password
Edit: sorry, I think I misunderstood what you said, but if someone is using something like “sign in with google”, we’ve had separate buttons for that for ages.
I think it might solve the problem that people often don’t remember if they created their account using SSO or with an email/password combo. So the site looks up your email to see what login method you use in order to redirect you to the proper prompt.
I cant answer about the separation of username/password, but unnecessary animations seem to be a product of the ensh*ttification of the web
Probably a security measure to slow down brute forcing
It still gets filled in by all browsers I have. From usability point of view it’s less chance someone press enter after putting in their login name thus leaving the password field empty and getting refused. This will often lead to a disruption friction of their workflow (don’t know the proper English word)
The JS to detect an empty password field and only enabling Enter
onchange
is way simpler than the code for two separate pages. I actually implemented the former once.Sure - but quite often it’s about doing what’s easy for the users/customers rather than programmers
How is that easier for users? You mentioned one point but I counterargued that the problem can be mitigated in other ways.
I’m not saying it IS a better solution, just that it might be. Did you do any usability testing on the two solutions and want to share some insight?
And I do think that if your decision on UX comes down to what’s easy to code you are wrong.
Google does this best. It hides the password field but it can still be picked up by bitwarden and other password managers so will already be auto-filled when you press next.
I still hate that form of login though.
I assume it’s to prevent some sort of automated process from trying a username and password over and over again, but that seems easy to get around.
There’s two reasons I can think of. One is direct resistance by services to password auto-fill during the aughts (it was new and scary) and separating the account field and pass field defeated auto-fill detection at the time. Amazon separated account and password around then and it’s been that way since.
The other is your secret picture, a preventative measure against phishing attacks used by banks and other commercial interests, When you create an account, you’re asked to select a stock image and a phrase that the site shows you when asking for your password. That way you know it’s really the bank’s site and not a phishing site.
Right now I think I have only one web account that uses such a protection.
Companies lose money when their customers get complacent with security. This is one method to increase engagement with the log in process to minimize inattention. Obviously it goes counter to the opposite goal of reducing friction with the UI, they try to balance somewhere between both.
The biggest cause of data compromisation is the damned companies themselves, not the users
Hahahahaha.
No
Name a breach caused by users and I can give you a dozen caused by company practises.
Why are you moving the goalposts? There wasn’t the single mention of a breach in what I replied to.
Companies lose money when their customers get complacent with security.
What exactly did you mean by this comment then?
Or the poor sardonic attempt in reply to me pointing out that data is compromised by companies, not users?
Suddenly it’s a goalpost move when facts can be proven against your narrative? Pish.
Man, I sure wish I had the superpower of making up quotes when arguing too.
Ah, sorry. Missed which dunning-kruger i was talking to.