Here’s the deal: you do a lot of business online. Amazon purchases, you check your X-Box account, access social networking sites and so on. And as I’ve said time and again, man in the middle attacks are at an all time high. So you needed a way of securing your online accounts beside using just a password.
While some sites like Facebook, Google and Dropbox have implemented forms of two-factor authentication, many sites do not (to my knowledge Apple and Amazon have not implemented TFA security). SSL alone doesn’t protect customers from online threats. Amazon AWS does support multi-factor authentication but, at the time of writing this, their user accounts do not have this feature (upon asking their technical support why they didn’t use TFA, I was told “SSL was secure” and not to worry).
For those left out of the loop, TFA relies on either texting you an ever changing security key or displaying one using a token generator (such as the great Google Authenticator for Android). Logging into a website from an unknown computer (one where a former cached login could not be found) results in a page asking you to confirm a key displayed on your token generator.
The way it works now if you don’t remember your password? A reset email can be mailed to you… not such great security. It sends an email to the account you registered with. If your email account is compromised to begin with, your other accounts can be too. All the SSL in the world doesn’t amount to a hill of beans if you don’t have better security practices for users that want to make use of them.
Social engineering attacks can also be used to get companies to change your passwords by phone. Apple and Amazon have already been caught doing this. For more information see my post entitled “Apple’s Social Engineering Crisis.”
So why don’t sites adopt TFA? They don’t want to be bothered implementing it. Really. That’s the only excuse I can think of since, if companies follow Google’s example, you have to manually opt in to using it in the first place.
So enough is enough. Start telling the companies that you do business with online to enact TFA now.
Related Articles (Better than this rant)
“Please Turn on Two-Factor Authentication.” Curts, Matt @ Lifehacker.
“Two-Factor Authentication: The Big List Of Everywhere You Should Enable It Right Now.” Gordon, Whitson @ Lifehacker Australia.
“XBox GM Talks Xbox Live Security.” Frederiksen, Eric. July 19,2012. See: http://www.technobuffalo.com/gaming/platform-gaming/xbox-upgrading-security/
Products of Note
Google Authenticator for Android
SolidPass Two-Factor Authentication Token (Used in many places)
Related Blog Posts
0 Comments.