this post was submitted on 05 Jun 2024
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SMS is the least secure form of 2FA, and sim swaps are a very real thing. Whatever you're issues with 2FA apps are, I can 100% say that you should be more concerned about actors getting access to your account.
And this isn't just GitHub. You should be using a 2FA app for allllll of your services. Breaches are a daily thing, your passwords are online and are available. 2FA may be the only thing defending you right now, and SMS 2fa or email 2fa I wouldn't trust.
Totally agree! 2FA on all the accounts that support it avoiding SMS. And different passwords (complex, auto generated by a password manager) for each single account. I may be paranoid, but I also use a different email alias (SimpleLogin) for every single account! ๐
same, a simple habit that is secure, I use it always with maximum privacy. One day you will be in a rush, under stress, affected by age, and use your old habits with a valuable asset...
SMS 2FA is still better than no 2FA.
Not if the org uses SMS auth as a recover method for your "lost" password
Also putting a phone number into a DB means the attackers who dump the DB now have a very effective way to phish or exploit you with a large attack surface.
I generally don't let my team enter phone numbers into their account data.
But it should be the last resort. It makes sense why it's being phased out
Unfortunately many banks still require it and have no other methods available. I tried to reason with my bank about it but they just do not care.
Well we could be using passkeys right now if Big Tech weren't trying to tie them to their own platforms! ๐คท
This, but my random, account-specific 20 char passwords are not online and available.