Bojan Simic, Chief Executive of HYPR and a FIDO Alliance board member, warns that IT help desks are increasingly targeted by attackers using social engineering tactics. These tactics often involve leveraging stressful scenarios, such as an executive locked out of their account just before boarding a flight, to pressure help desk agents into bypassing or overlooking security protocols. “The help desk shouldn’t be the weakest link; it should be the first line of defence. That means moving beyond guesswork and adopting identity verification that confirms who someone is, versus what they know or the device they’re using. With phishing-resistant, standards-based verification built into support workflows, agents stop being human lie detectors and start being defenders,” said Simic. 


More

WinBuzzer: Microsoft Edge Now Syncs Passkeys Across Windows Devices, Bolstering Passwordless Push

Microsoft is rolling out a significant update to its Edge browser that allows users to save and sync…

Read More →

Biometric Update: iProov certified for biometric deepfake protection with Ingenium IAD test

iProov’s biometric injection attack detection technology has passed an evaluation by Ingenium Biometrics to the Level 2…

Read More →

WebProNews: WhatsApp Rolls Out Biometric Passkeys for Encrypted Chat Backups

WhatsApp has introduced passkey-encrypted chat backups using biometric authentication like Touch ID or Face ID,…

Read More →


123297 Next