Passwords are a form of knowledge-based authentication. For a user to prove they are who they claim to be, they need a secret — the password — that has been previously stored by the service. Multifactor authentication (MFA) is a technique designed to strengthen the authentication process by adding possession-based authentication to knowledge-based authentication. A service can only authenticate a user when they prove they have knowledge of the shared secret in addition to something they have or are. Eliminating shared secrets removes the intrinsic weakness of password-based authentication and MFA. A secure form of possession-based authentication is the best alternative. Passwordless authentication based on FIDO standards is considered the archetype. FIDO passwordless authentication is based on public-key cryptography.


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Teiss: Security by obscurity keeps us password-dependent

We need security, by community. Andrew Shikiar of the FIDO Alliance calls on more businesses…

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Financial IT: FIDO Alliance study reveals password usage still dominates financial services – and is proving costly

The FIDO Alliance published its second annual Online Authentication Barometer, which gathers insights into the…

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Dark Reading: Microsoft’s Certificate-Based Authentication enables phishing resistant MFA

Microsoft has removed a key obstacle facing organizations seeking to deploy phishing-resistant multifactor authentication (MFA)…

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