The FIDO Alliance has announced the launch of the FIDO Device Onboard (FDO) certification program to enable edge node and IoT device vendors to prove that their solutions adhere to security and interoperability specifications.
Certification allows vendors to demonstrate that their products are at low risk of cyber threats, while deploying companies can ensure devices will interoperate securely within IoT and distributed computing infrastructures, according to the FIDO Alliance.
Leading vendors such as Dell Technologies, IBM, and Intel have already begun to include the FDO specification in products and services, which are being utilized by customers in a variety of settings and applications, the FIDO Alliance said.
The FIDO Alliance is an open industry association launched in February 2013 whose core mission is to develop and promote authentication standards that help reduce the world’s over-reliance on passwords. It aims to address the lack of interoperability among devices that use strong authentication and reduces the problems users face creating and remembering multiple usernames and passwords.
Last year, tech giants Apple, Google, and Microsoft extended support for a common passwordless sign-in standard created by the FIDO Alliance and the World Wide Web Consortium.
FIDO protocol champions a zero-trust approach to device security
The FDO protocol is a freely available standard that champions a “zero-trust” approach to enable devices to quickly and securely onboard to cloud and edge management platforms, the FIDO Alliance said in a press release.