The traditional login page has two fields: username and password. But some sites, notably Google and Amazon, first ask for the username and only later provide a password field, placing each field on its own page. Is this design choice motivated by a security point of view? If so, why is that?
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Related: https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/85160/is-having-the-username-and-password-fields-on-different-pages-more-secure – mti2935 Nov 23 '21 at 16:39
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2Does this answer your question? [Is having the username and password fields on different pages more secure?](https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/85160/is-having-the-username-and-password-fields-on-different-pages-more-secure), [Why do some sites ask for username/email and password on two separate screens?](https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/160692/why-do-some-sites-ask-for-username-email-and-password-on-two-separate-screens). – Steffen Ullrich Nov 23 '21 at 16:47
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@SteffenUllrich my question is definitely a dupe of the second one you suggested. Thanks. – guest Nov 23 '21 at 16:57