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

CNET: Facebook now lets you lock down logins with a key

CNET reports that social media giant Facebook is now enabling users to lock down their…

Read More →

Ars Technica: Now there’s a better way to prevent Facebook account takeovers

Facebook is joining a handful of online services—including Google, Dropbox, GitHub, and Salesforce—in supporting security…

Read More →

American Banker: Why banks should consider taking a page from Facebook on security keys

American Banker poses the question, “If Facebook brings physical security keys using FIDO authentication to…

Read More →


Subscribe to the FIDO newsletter

Stay Connected, Stay Engaged

Receive the latest news, events, research and implementation guidance from the FIDO Alliance. Learn about digital identity and fast, phishing-resistant authentication with passkeys.