If your MFA is stored in your password manager, you’re not getting prompts to your phone about it. You’re just prompted for a otp code that you have to go out of your way to copy/paste or type in from the manager.
Comment on Google Says Sorry After Passwords Vanish For 15 Million Windows Users.
Godnroc@lemmy.world 3 months agoTo set a scene, you awake in the middle of the night because your phone is making noise. Blearily you unlock it, glance at a prompt, and then approve a login and fall back asleep. The intruder now has access to your password manager!
They attempt to log into your bank and drain your life savings, but despite having your password it sends another prompt to your phone. This time, you wake up enough to realize something is wrong. This time, you deny the prompt.
The entire second paragraph cannot happen if your MFA is a single factor. Don’t store MFA in your password manager!
Hexarei@programming.dev 3 months ago
Telorand@reddthat.com 3 months ago
Bruh, if my phone is sending me notifications in the middle of the night, the first thing I’m doing is uninstalling whatever app is sending me notifications.
If people are that gullible to fall prey to an attack like this, managing OTP in two apps is probably more than they can handle anyway. Everybody has a different threat model, and it’s okay if it’s not covered by hardware passkeys and locally hashed and managed databases.
JackbyDev@programming.dev 3 months ago
Blearily you unlock it, glance at a prompt, and then approve a login and fall back asleep.
The idea that people would approve that is wild to me.
subtext@lemmy.world 3 months ago
I mean yeah it’s less secure than if they were separated. But my mom is never going to use a separate app for passwords and 2FA, so the two in one app is still better than nothing.