Stu Sjouwerman, founder, and CEO of KnowBe4 Inc shares his thoughts on how MFAs fell short in data security. A Verizon research report says that 82% of all cyberattacks fall on human error (stolen credentials, phishing, misuse). For a hacker to successfully gain access to credentials they need some level of human involvement to get around MFA defences. Some common phishing techniques include, MiTM attacks, SIM-swapping attacks, “Pass-the-cookie” attacks, and MFA fatigue. The strongest forms of MFAs are based on FIDO2 standards that enables users to access resources through biometrics. The deployment of FIDO2 eliminates the risk of phishing attacks but ensuring users are well trained to identify cyberthreats is just as important if not more.


More

Research Snipers: Microsoft Authenticator Deletes All Stored Passwords, Pushes Users Toward Passkeys

As announced, Microsoft today deletes all stored passwords from his authenticator app. Users have to…

Read More →

Security.World: HID Unveils Next-Generation FIDO Hardware And Centralized Management At Scale

HID, a worldwide leader in trusted identity and access management solutions, has announced a new line of FIDO-certified credentials—now powered…

Read More →

GB News: Microsoft will start DELETING your passwords from today, and there’s only one way to save them

Microsoft has started to delete all passwords saved in its Authenticator app — and if you want…

Read More →