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11 Comments

If a nation state is really interested in getting into your Facebook account, I don’t think a code sent to your phone is going to keep them out.

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Seemed like an OK idea until I got to the part about text messages. Believe it or not, everybody in the world does not have texting…..it is an option you know.

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Contrary to the implication in the article, I’m not certain that text message is the only way to get the one-time code. I believe that I’ve seen the code pop up in the facebook application in my phone, and you have the option to print out a list of one-time-use codes that you can use without a smart phone.

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Good point. I’ve got a landline phone and a desktop and *no* form of mobile communication (I’m retired and rarely away from home), and I feel the biggest failing of 2FA these days is its reliance on the assumption that everyone in the universe has access to SMS or equivalent texting.

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It’s annoying to say the least that you can’t use an external authentication like Google’s Authentication app, and that you have to hand over credentials like a telephone number for “security”. Same with Twitter.
I trust the authenticator app a lot more than I trust receiving a text message, and don’t trust the companies enough not to abuse the fact they have my contact number.

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Seems to me that if they can get your passwords and such they can also get your phone number and send you a login code that they have set up themselves.

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