Microsoft has removed a key obstacle facing organizations seeking to deploy phishing-resistant multifactor authentication (MFA) by enabling certificate-based authentication (CBA) in Azure Active Directory. This comes as experts anticipate advanced phishing attacks will rise next year. “I think social engineering and MFA bypass attacks will continue to grow in 2023, where some other major service providers suffer meaningful breaches like we did this year,” Andrew Shikiar says.


More

Information Management: Three steps toward stronger data protection

The FIDO Alliance has worked to create one of the strongest authentication protocols in the…

Read More →

CSO: 9 cyber security predictions for 2019

In this CSO article, the staff predicts that FIDO2 browser enhancements will help enable multifactor…

Read More →

The Verge: You can now sign into a Microsoft Account without a password using a security key

Microsoft is the first company to support passwordless authentication using FIDO2 WebAuthn and CTAP2 standards…

Read More →