According to a PayPal notice of security incident dated January 18, attackers got unauthorized access to the accounts of thousands of users between December 6 and 8, 2022. The total number of accounts that were accessed by threat actors using a credential stuffing attack is reported as being 34,942. While accepting that PayPal is seemingly doing the best it can for the customers involved in this security incident by recommending password changes, Jasson Casey, chief technology officer at Beyond Identity insists that “passwords – whether unique or complex – are fundamentally flawed.” Instead, Casey says, organizations should be moving to phishing-resistant credentials such as the FIDO Alliance standard blueprints.


More

Tech Target: Why 2023 is the year of passwordless authentication

Passwords are a form of knowledge-based authentication. For a user to prove they are who…

Read More →

Forbes: Why MFA Falls Short And What Can Be Done About It

Stu Sjouwerman, founder, and CEO of KnowBe4 Inc shares his thoughts on how MFAs fell…

Read More →

ars Technica: Phishers who breached Twilio and targeted Cloudflare could easily get you, too

At least two security-sensitive companies—Twilio and Cloudflare—were targeted in a phishing attack by an advanced…

Read More →