Passwordless login for your whole team
Your people stop typing secrets. Their devices become the credential — every sign-in is a live biometric check against a key sealed in hardware. There is no password to phish, reuse, or reset.
The password problem
Passwords are the most attacked, most reused, most leaked secret in any company. They get phished in seconds, sold in bulk, and reused across dozens of services — so one leak quietly becomes many breaches. Bolting MFA on top helps, but SMS codes and one-time passwords are still phishable, still resettable by a convincing phone call, and still a daily friction for every employee.
Enroll once, on the device
Each employee enrolls in minutes. A unique cryptographic key pair is generated inside their phone or laptop — the private key never leaves the chip.
Sign in with a glance or a touch
At login, the device asks for Face ID or Touch ID. The biometric unlocks the hardware key, which signs a one-time challenge. No codes, no OTPs, no typing.
Every request is verified
The signature proves it is the right person, on the right device, right now. Stolen credentials are useless because there are no credentials to steal.
Lost device? Revoke in seconds
Admins revoke a device with one click. The key dies with the device — access ends instantly, everywhere.
What if an employee loses their phone or laptop?
Revoke the device from the admin console in one click. Because the key lives only on that device, revoking it ends all access instantly — and a replacement device enrolls in minutes.
Does this work without an internet connection?
Yes. The biometric check and the signing both happen on the device, so local actions like unlocking a laptop keep working offline.
Do we have to replace our existing apps?
No. CyberCyko sits in front of your current SSO and desktop login using standard protocols, so the apps your team uses do not change.
Is the biometric stored anywhere?
Never. Face and fingerprint data stay inside the device’s secure hardware and are never transmitted to or stored by CyberCyko.
Most breaches start with a stolen password. Remove the password, and that entire attack class disappears with it.