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#mfa

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#UkraineKrieg

👉Russisches Außenministerium #MFA bedient sich erneut #Goebbels-Rhetorik👈

(1/n)

#Russland, welches 2014 und 2022 die #Ukraine, davor u. a. #Georgien und #Tschetschenien überfallen hat, beschuldigt das sein völkerrechtlich verbrieftes Recht auf #Selbstverteidigung ausübendes Land der "Agression" und des "Terrorismus'":

Von @noelreports:

"🇷🇺 Die Sprecherin des Außenministerius, #MariaZakharova, erklärte, die #Ukraine habe erhebliche...

mstdn.social/@noelreports/1146

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Natürlich kann man auch vorbeugen, beispielsweise durch verantwortungsvollen Umgang mit Passwörtern.2FA

Dinge, die heute selbstverständlich sein sollten, wie

* eindeutige Passwörter
* ein Passwortmanager dafür
* Nutzung von Zwei-Faktor-Authentifizierung, insbesondere für Mailkonten!

#2FA #MFA
marcel-waldvogel.ch/2020/04/22

Marcel Waldvogel · Sicherheitstipps (nicht nur) fürs Homeoffice
More from Marcel Waldvogel

Tsja..... "Tegelijkertijd legt het rapport de vinger op zere plekken. Zo had de TU/e weliswaar multifactorauthenticatie op de meeste applicaties, maar nog niet op de log-in van het VPN. Dat stond in de planning voor de eerste helft van 2025. "
tue.nl/nieuws-en-evenementen/n
#cybersecurity #TUe #mfa

www.tue.nl‘TU/e handelde goed bij cyberaanval, maar er zijn ook leerpunten’Onderzoek: daders onbekend, ze waren waarschijnlijk uit op losgeld

Handle MFA like a pro so you don’t get locked out or let the bad guys in

Why you should use MFA, what about passkeys, what kind of MFA to use, how to make it easier to use, and how to protect yourself against being locked out of an account because of MFA.
#infosec #MFA #passwordManager #passkeys
blog.kamens.us/2025/05/06/hand

Something better to do · Handle MFA like a pro so you don’t get locked out or let the bad guys in
More from jik

🆕 blog! “That's Not How A SIM Swap Attack Works”

There's a disturbing article in The Guardian about a person who was on the receiving end of a successful cybersecurity attack.

EE texted to say they had processed my sim activation request, and the new sim would be active in 24 hours. I was told to contact them if I hadn’t requested this. I hadn’t, so I did …

👀 Read more: shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/04/thats

#2fa #CyberSecurity #MFA #security #sim

Terence Eden’s Blog · That's Not How A SIM Swap Attack Works
More from Terence Eden

That's Not How A SIM Swap Attack Works

shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/04/thats

There's a disturbing article in The Guardian about a person who was on the receiving end of a successful cybersecurity attack.

EE texted to say they had processed my sim activation request, and the new sim would be active in 24 hours. I was told to contact them if I hadn’t requested this. I hadn’t, so I did so immediately. Twenty-four hours later, my mobile stopped working and money was withdrawn from my bank account.

With their alien sim, the ­fraudster infiltrated my handset and stole details for every account I had. Passwords and logins had been changed for my finance, retail and some social media accounts.

(Emphasis added.)

I realise it is in the consumer rights section of the newspaper, not the technology section, and I dare-say some editorialising has gone on, but that's nonsense.

Here's how a SIM swap works.

  1. Attacker convinces your phone company to reassign your telephone number to a new SIM.
  2. Attacker goes to a website where you have an account, and initiates a password reset.
  3. Website sends a verification code to your phone number, which is now in the hands of the attacker.
  4. Attacker supplies verification code and gets into your account.

Do you notice the missing step there?

At no point does the attacker "infiltrate" your handset. Your handset is still in your possession. The SIM is dead, but that doesn't give the attacker access to the phone itself. There is simply no way for someone to put a new SIM into their phone and automatically get access to your device.

Try it now. Take your SIM out of your phone and put it into a new one. Do all of your apps suddenly appear? Are your usernames and passwords visible to you? No.

There are ways to transfer your data from an iPhone or Android - but they require a lot more work than swapping a SIM.

So how did the attacker know which websites to target and what username to use?

What (Probably) Happened

Let's assume the person in the article didn't have malware on their device and hadn't handed over all their details to a cold caller.

The most obvious answer is that the attacker already knew the victim's email address. Maybe the victim gave out their phone number and email to some dodgy site, or they're listed on their contact page, or something like that.

The attacker now has two routes.

First is "hit and hope". They try the email address on hundreds of popular sites' password reset page until they get a match. That's time-consuming given the vast volume of websites.

Second is targetting your email. If the attacker can get into your email, they can see which sites you use, who your bank is, and where you shop. They can target those specific sites, perform a password reset, and get your details.

I strongly suspect it is the latter which has happened. The swapped SIM was used to reset the victim's email password. Once in the email, all the accounts were easily found. At no point was the handset broken into.

What can I do to protect myself?

It is important to realise that there's nothing you can do to prevent a SIM-swap attack! Your phone company is probably incompetent and their staff can easily be bribed. You do not control your phone number. If you get hit by a SIM swap, it almost certainly isn't your fault.

So here are some practical steps anyone can take to reduce the likelihood and effectiveness of this class of attack:

  • Remember that it's OK to lie to WiFi providers and other people who ask for your details. You don't need to give someone your email for a receipt. You don't need to hand over your real phone number on a survey. This is the most important thing you can do.
  • Try to hack yourself. How easy would it be for an attacker who had stolen your phone number to also steal your email address? Open up a private browser window and try to reset your email password. What do you notice? How could you secure yourself better?
  • Don't use SMS for two-factor authentication. If you are given a choice of 2FA methods, use a dedicated app. If the only option you're given is SMS - contact the company to complain, or leave for a different provider.
  • Don't rely on a setting a PIN for your SIM. The PIN only protects the physical SIM from being moved to a new device; it does nothing to stop your number being ported to a new SIM.
  • Finally, realise that professional criminals only need to be lucky once but you need to be lucky all the time.

Stay safe out there.

Terence Eden’s Blog · That's Not How A SIM Swap Attack Works
More from Terence Eden

🆕 blog! “FobCam '25 - All my MFA tokens on one page”

Some ideas are timeless. Back in 2004, an anonymous genius set up "FobCam". Tired of having to carry around an RSA SecurID token everywhere, our hero simply left the fob at home with an early webcam pointing at it. And then left the page open for all to see.

Security expert Bruce…

👀 Read more: shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/04/fobca

#2fa #CyberSecurity #MFA #Satire(Probably) #security

Terence Eden’s Blog · FobCam '25 - All my MFA tokens on one page
More from Terence Eden

FobCam '25 - All my MFA tokens on one page

shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/04/fobca

Some ideas are timeless. Back in 2004, an anonymous genius set up "FobCam". Tired of having to carry around an RSA SecurID token everywhere, our hero simply left the fob at home with an early webcam pointing at it. And then left the page open for all to see.

Security expert Bruce Schneier approved0 of this trade-off between security and usability - saying what we're all thinking:

Here’s a guy who has a webcam pointing at his SecurID token, so he doesn’t have to remember to carry it around. Here’s the strange thing: unless you know who the webpage belongs to, it’s still good security. Crypto-Gram - August 15, 2004

Nowadays, we have to carry dozens of these tokens with us. Although, unlike the poor schmucks of 2004, we have an app for that. But I don't always have access to my phone. Sometimes I'm in a secure location where I can't access my electronics. Sometimes my phone gets stolen, and I need to log into Facebook to whinge about it. Sometimes I just can't be bothered to remember which fingerprint unlocks my phone1.

Using the Web Crypto API, it is easy to Generate TOTP Codes in JavaScript directly in the browser. So here are all my important MFA tokens. If I ever need to log in somewhere, I can just visit this page and grab the code I need2.

All My Important Codes

What The Actual Fuck?

A 2007 paper called Lessons learned from the deployment of a smartphone-based access-control system looked at whether fobs met the needs of their users:

However, we observed that end users tend to be most concerned about how convenient [fobs] are to use. There are many examples of end users of widely used access-control technologies readily sacrificing security for convenience. For example, it is well known that users often write their passwords on post-it notes and stick them to their computer monitors. Other users are more inventive: a good example is the user who pointed a webcam at his fob and published the image online so he would not have to carry the fob around.

As for Schneier's suggestion that anonymity added protection, a contemporary report noted that the owner of the FobCam site was trivial to identify3.

Every security system involves trade-offs. I have a password manager, but with over a thousand passwords in it, the process of navigating and maintaining becomes a burden. The number of 2FA tokens I have is also rising. All of these security factors need backing up. Those back-ups need testing4. It is an endless cycle of drudgery.

What's a rational user supposed to do5? I suppose I could buy a couple of hardware keys, keep one in an off-site location, but somehow keep both in sync, and hope that a firmware-update doesn't brick them.

Should I just upload all of my passwords, tokens, secrets, recovery codes, passkeys, and biometrics6 into the cloud?

The cloud is just someone else's computer. This website is my computer. So I'm going to upload all my factors here. What's the worst that could happen7.

  1. 🫠 ↩︎

  2. 🖕 ↩︎

  3. 🙃 ↩︎

  4. The neologism "doxing" hadn't yet been invented. ↩︎

  5. As was written by the prophets: "Only wimps use tape backup: real men just upload their important stuff on ftp, and let the rest of the world mirror it" ↩︎

  6. I in no way imply that I am rational. ↩︎

  7. Just one more factor, that'll fix security, just gotta add one more factor bro. ↩︎

  8. This is left as an exercise for the reader. ↩︎

Terence Eden’s Blog · FobCam '25 - All my MFA tokens on one page
More from Terence Eden

Security. I set up MFA on my Proton account using 2FAS. Made a backup of the MFA-setting from 2FAS and stored that in a Cryptomator vault located on my NextCloud system.

If you still use Google Authenticator: I can recommend 2FAS (and supporting them).

AU Tech folk: Which provider do you recommend for registering .au domains (eg .com.au, .org.au, .au etc)?

Second question. Do they currently support Multi-factor Authentication, specifically MFA TOTP (eg using an Auth App)?

Looking for alternatives to VentraIP as it's currently the only .au registra I know of that offers MFA TOTP.

New Privacy Guides article 🔑✨
by me:

If you are using a YubiKey,

you might get in some situations where you need to reset your key to factory default, and/or set up a backup of it on a spare key.

This tutorial will guide you
through each step to reset and back up your YubiKey successfully, with clear instructions and plenty of visual support.

I hope you find it helpful!

privacyguides.org/articles/202