Google is Street Stall (2015)shaking up its two-factor authentication system in Gmail.
In an exchange with Forbes, a Google spokesperson confirmed that the company is working on ditching SMS text messages as a form of account authentication in Gmail. For years, this has been one of the main ways to gain access to a Gmail account; you just enter your phone number, and then enter the six-digit code Google sends as a text message.
But, as Google puts it, the company will work to replace those with QR codes "over the next few months."
Google's stated reasons for doing this are understandable. SMS authentication is subject to phishing scams, and receiving a text message necessarily puts the end user's service carrier in the mix as a middleman. Carriers all have different security practices, and more importantly, are fallible. In other words, there are clear and obvious security risks to having users input codes received as text messages for account authentication, and QR codes would eliminate some of those risks.
There's no firm date for when this change will happen, but look out for it as we roll through 2025.
Topics Cybersecurity Google
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
How to Reboot and Reset Android Devices
Elon Musk melts down about stay
Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo completes flight from Spaceport America
Trumpniks have no defense for the James Comey mess, so duh, they're blaming the media
Best iPad deal: Save $100 on 13
Tumblr's new mental health initiative provides tools and support during coronavirus pandemic
Can you guess which picture Trump wants hung in the White House?
Bon voyage': Elon Musk tells Twitter followers to get lost
Japan orders Google to stop alleged antitrust violations
Private equity firm won't get to control the .org domain after all
Get Rid of Windows 10 Ads, Office Offers and Other Annoyances
That Dakota Access Pipeline leak isn't the builder's only problem
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。