• SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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    1 year ago

    Standard MFA (time based codes) is not phishing resistant. Users can be social engineered into giving up a password and MFA token.

    So basically this is just idiot-proofing the system. If you aren’t the type of person to give your password or MFA token to another person, then passkeys don’t really make better security.

    • 0xc0ba17@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      idiot-proofing

      Don’t chalk it up to idiots. The quote mentions “MFA fatigue”, which is something that definitely happens.

      If you’re a Windows user (and moreso if you play games on your computer), you certainly regularly have admin prompts. I’m pretty sure that, like everyone else, you just click OK without a second thought. That’s fatigue. Those prompts exist for a security reason, yet there are so many of them that they don’t register anymore and have lost all their meaning.

      For my job, I often have to login into MS Azure, and there are days where I have to enter my MFA 3 or 4 times in a row. I expect it, so I don’t really look at the prompt anymore. I just enter the token to be done with it asap; that’s a security risk