Email login activation link for signing into a sight Not just for activating an account. http://qz.com/234901/the-future-of-passwords-really-is-no-passwords/ q. “Sign-in is the part of the site of the site no one cares about. It’s not a feature; it’s a necessary evil. So the question is how do we make that as painless as possible,” says Blaine Cook, formerly of Twitter and now a co-founder of Poetica, a collaborative-writing tool. It is worth thinking about what exactly a password proves, Cook says. When you forget your password, as you inevitably will, any web service will send you an email for you to reset it. *All a password boils down to is being able to prove that you have access to your stated email account.* **Why not cut out the middleman?** But Cook’s way of doing it is different: Rather than remind users that they have to sign in, Poetica removes the the ugly bits. The first time a user visits Poetica after the initial registration, all she has to do is enter her email address. Since people tend to be logged in to their Gmail or Facebook accounts in any case, the system checks to confirm their logged-in identity on those services and then lets them in. “We can do that without prompting for a password, or any user intervention at all, in most cases for existing users,” Cook says. Moreover, Cook says he is working on supporting third-party email providers through open-identification standards. Another idea he has is to send people an email with a one-time login that installs a cookie on users’ machines. That keeps them logged in. If they sign out, they can request another one-time login. But in the end, it all boils down to email, rather than yet another password for people to remember—or forget. q.. It seems that the flaw with Poetica is that a user must have an account at one of the following services: * Facebook * Google * Twitter * Microsoft Without a registration at one of those services, then I don't think a user can create an account. #email - #password - #security