VIA POLITICO Morning Cybersecurity Report 10/6/17

NOW THAT’S WHAT I’M TOKEN ABOUT — The Social Security Administration should let Americans add an extra layer of hack-proof protection to the information they provide the agency, according to a leading cyber-focused lawmaker. In a letter to acting SSA Commissioner Nancy Berryhill, Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden said the agency should let people use physical tokens for two-factor authentication on their accounts. Unlike the most common two-factor approaches — text messages and authenticator apps — these tokens are “resistant to all phishing,” Wyden wrote. He pointed out that the agency had already started moving in this direction by making two-factor authentication mandatory for all accounts in June, and he commended the agency for adding a security feature to its website that would make it harder for cyber criminals to impersonate the government in phishing emails. The logical next step, he wrote, is the token-based Universal 2nd Factor, or U2F, standard. “Given the low cost of implementation and strong additional protection that U2F provides, I urge SSA to consider supporting U2F on an opt-in basis for workers and beneficiaries,” Wyden told Berryhill.

Read the story: https://www.politico.com/tipsheets/morning-cybersecurity/2017/10/06/latest-reported-nsa-cyber-tool-theft-raises-contractor-kaspersky-concerns-222693

Read the letter: https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/100517%20RW%20to%20SSA%20U2F.pdf


More

The Verge: Safari to support password-less logins via Face ID and Touch ID later this year

Safari 14, the version of Apple’s browser that will ship with iOS 14 and macOS…

Read More →

CNET: Safari 14 will let you log in to websites with your face or finger

With Safari on iOS 14, MacOS Big Sur and iPadOS 14, you’ll be able to log in to…

Read More →

Marketing in Asia: Get To Know Andrew Shikiar, Executive Director At FIDO Alliance

Get to Know Andrew Shikiar and get some perspective on the spread of FIDO standards…

Read More →