Chrome for Android to offer a new option to fill passwords on websites

Chrome for Android remembers the username and password you enter into an email account or other websites and auto-fills the credentials next time when you visit. Chrome is already rolling out touch-to-fill for passwords feature and another feature related to password autofill on Android is being worked out by Google and the feature will allow the user to “Fill password from any origin” with new “Use other password” option.

In addition to already available, “Manage passwords” and “suggest strong password, Chrome for Android’s password bottom sheet to offer “Use another password” option. To see this new option in Chrome,

  1. Visit chrome://flags page
  2. Search for “Filling passwords from any origin”
  3. Select “Enabled” from the dropdown and restart the browser.

Visit any website and try to log in

With Touch to fill feature enabled by default in Canary, Chrome prompts to select an account

Select account for the username and password to be auto-filled, now tap on the password field and scroll horizontally and tap on the key icon and scroll down to the bottom to notice newly available “Use other password” option, select it, chrome will suggest a password, tap “Use password”.

filling passwords from any origin flag use other password option

Google offers this description for the feature flag: “Enabling this flag adds a button to the password fallback sheet. The button opens a different sheet that allows filling a password from any origin – Android”.

Related articles:

Chrome for Android receives ‘Touch to Fill’ for Passwords

 Chrome for desktop now lets you Edit Passwords in Canary

Google to bring ‘Back Forward Cache’ to Chrome 86 for Android

Chrome for Android is getting ‘Download later’ to Schedule downloads

Chrome to disable Autofill on Insecure (mixed) forms

Venkat Eswarlu

Venkat is an independent technology journalist and the founder of Techdows. He has been covering web browsers, Windows, and software news since 2009. His exclusive scoops on Chrome, Firefox, and Edge features have been cited by Forbes, TechCrunch, Wired, CNET, and other major publications.

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