Khaleej Times

Apple faces suit over two-factor authentica­tion

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san francisco — A recent lawsuit filed against Apple accused the two-factor authentica­tion process of the iPhone maker of being disruptive to users, time consuming and abusive since it cannot be rolled back to a less safe login method after 14 days.

The suit, filed by Jay Brodsky, alleged that Apple did not get user consent to enable two-factor authentica­tion, an Apple insider reported.

Two-factor authentica­tion is an extra layer of security designed by Apple to ensure that you are the only person who can access your account, even if someone knows your password.

Brodsky’s suit, which was filed in California, also mentions that once enabled, Apple’s two-factor authentica­tion “imposes an extraneous logging-in procedure that requires a user to both remember password and have access to a trusted device or phone number” when a device is enabled.

The suit alleged that Apple’s email that reaches users upon enabling the two-factor authentica­tion was insufficie­nt to warn the user that the setting was irrevocabl­e.

Seeking all funds, revenues and benefits that the iPhone-maker has “unjustly received” from the action, the suit demanded injunctive relief, fines and penalties assessed on Apple in accordance with the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

Brodsky also asserted that Apple was violating California’s Invasion of Privacy Act.

Apple has yet to respond to the issue. —

 ?? AP ?? Apple has an extra layer of security on its iPhones. —
AP Apple has an extra layer of security on its iPhones. —

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