In just two weeks, the ban on SMS two-factor authentication for non-subscribers on Twitter will go into effect, a move blasted by the majority of the security community.

While Twitter CEO Elon Musk has defended the move as a way to protect user security, most leaders aren’t buying it.

“Just from a purely pragmatic standpoint, this is basically stripping away the lowest threshold of 2FA out there without any sort of viable or easy replacement,” Andrew Shikiar, executive director of the FIDO Alliance, told SC Media.


More

CSO: Two years after the OPM data breach: What government agencies must do now

In this look back at the OPM data breach, Jeremy Grant of Venable and FIDO’s…

Read More →

mHealth Intelligence: Can Behaviors Replace the Password on Mobile Health Devices?

mHealth Intelligence reports on a FIDO Alliance webinar featuring Aetna, who spoke on modern authentication…

Read More →

Health Data Management: What can healthcare providers do about the rising number of security breaches?

FIDO Alliance’s Brett McDowell and Aetna’s Jim Routh explain that, with the increasing frequency of…

Read More →