Otago Daily Times

Twofactor identifica­tion logins safer

- By JIM ROSSMAN

I’M hearing from more users about protecting their online identities, and I got a question this week about twofactor authentica­tion, which the reader had heard of but didn’t quite understand.

Twofactor authentica­tion is a way to provide more protection when you access your online accounts.

I have twofactor authentica­tion enabled for my Apple ID, online banking, Twitter, Facebook and Google accounts.

How it works

Most companies’ implementa­tions of twofactor authentica­tion involve associatin­g a trusted device — usually a cellphone — that you’ll use during the login process.

Some also use a phone call. Instead of logging in with just a username and a password, you’ll be texted or called with a code that you enter into a secondary login screen to gain access.

This way, for someone to gain access to your account, they would have to know your password and have your phone.

Usually you’ll only have to do twofactor authentica­tion the first time you log into your account on a new device or with a new browser.

The system should offer to remember the login so it won’t need to send you a code again for that device.

If you want to make things as secure as you can, you can set it up so you have to enter the twofactor authentica­tion code every time you log in.

How to set things up

Make a list of the accounts you’d like to secure.

Then call up your accounts, head to the security preference­s and look for twofactor authentica­tion. Twitter calls it login verificati­on. Facebook has a section on the security and login settings to enable twofactor authentica­tion.

Apple lets you turn it on from your phone or a browser.

From your iPhone, go to Settings, then iCloud, then Password and Security.

From a browser, go to icloud.com and then Settings, then scroll down to the Security section.

Android users will find the experience the same.

Look for twofactor authentica­tion wherever you find your user profile.

Securing your Google accounts and any other app store accounts will help.

Is it rocksolid safe?

No. Twofactor authentica­tion is not 100% safe.

Nothing is, but using twofactor authentica­tion is much more secure than using only a password.

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