您现在的位置是:熱點 >>正文
【】
熱點73人已围观
简介When it comes to United States Senate email accounts, you'd think the powers that be would enact a b ...
When it comes to United States Senate email accounts, you'd think the powers that be would enact a basic security feature that even Yahoo Mail and AOL have down.
Shocker: You would be wrong.
SEE ALSO:The best thing you can do to protect yourself from hackersAs an April 20 open letter from Oregon Senator Ron Wyden makes clear, Senate email accounts lack the option to enable two-factor authentication. Like, senators can't turn it on even if they want to.
"As you know, the cybersecurity and foreign intelligence threats directed at Congress aresignificant," wrote Wyden in the letter addressed to two Senate colleagues. "However, the Senate is far behind when it comes to implementing basic cybersecurity practices like two-factor authentication."
What exactly is two-factor authentication (2FA), and why does this matter? Let's let the experts over at the Electronic Frontier Foundation explain.
"Login systems that require only a username and password risk being broken when someone else can obtain (or guess) those pieces of information," notes the organization. "Services that offer two-factor authentication also require you to provide a separate confirmation that you are who you say you are. The second factor could be a one-off secret code, a number generated by a program running on a mobile device, or a device that you carry and that you can use to confirm who you are."
An easy-to-grasp example of 2FA is your bank ATM card. In order to withdraw cash, you need the PIN (something you know) and the card itself (something you have). Those two factors combine to allow you, and hopefully only you, to access to your hard-earned dollars.

With 2FA turned on, even if someone gains your email password (like maybe just possibly through a phishing attack) they still lack the necessary credentials to get into your inbox. This seems like something sitting members of the United States Senate and their staff would be interested in, right?
And yet.
"Today, the Senate neither requires nor offers two-factor authentication as an additionalprotection for desktop computers and email accounts," writes Wyden. "The Senate Sergeant at Arms does require two-factor authentication for staff who wish to log in to Senate IT systems from home, using a Virtual Private Network. This is a good first step, but the Senate must go further and embrace two-factor authentication for the workplace, and not just for staff connecting from home."
Offering 2FA is often viewed as one of several basic security litmus tests for online services. Gmail, Twitter, Facebook, AOL, and even the much-maligned Yahoo Mail make it easy to turn this on — meaning your grandmother's email account is potentially more secure than your senator's.
As that depressing little nugget of information sinks in, Wyden hits us with a jaw-dropping follow. The executive branch, you see, offers employees Personal Identity Verification (PIV) cards which contain smart chips. The chips work as part of a 2FA system for employees to log into computers. The senate also offers PIV cards, Wyden tells us, but these don't have smart chips.
What do they have instead?
"[In] contrast to the executive branch's widespread adoption of PIV cards with a smartchip, most senate staff ID cards have a photo of a chip printed on them, rather than a real chip."
That's right, a photo of a chip printed on them.
So, to recap: Senate email accounts aren't protected by 2FA, and most Senate staff ID cards have fake smart chips.
Next on the agenda, we assume, is the revelation that the password to each and every senators' personal voicemail account is just "0000."
Featured Video For You
Edward Snowden says Russians probably hacked the NSA
TopicsCybersecurityYahoo
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://www.new.maomao321.com/news/34a55599410.html
相关文章
Researchers create temporary tattoos you can use to control your devices
熱點In the future, your tattoos could be much more than just ink designs. 。Scientists have created a new ...
【熱點】
阅读更多'The Last of Us' episode 8 uses a map to reveal something about Joel
熱點Joel (Pedro Pascal), our favourite surly scowling protagonist, has a past.This is something that's b ...
【熱點】
阅读更多Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for January 4
熱點How is 2023 going for you so far? Whether it’s better or worse than you may have hoped, we kno ...
【熱點】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Australian football makes history with first LGBT Pride Game
- The Bing AI chatbot is getting updated after a tough first week
- Ariana DeBose's rap about Angela Bassett did the thing at the BAFTAs
- Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for January 4
- Dramatic photo captures nun texting friends after Italy earthquake
- Microsoft is laying off 10,000 employees
最新文章
Here's George Takei chilling in zero gravity for the 'Star Trek' anniversary
What is subtle merch, and why is it all over TikTok?
Arizona's M3F Festival is a nonprofit, community
The 9 best Chicken Shop Date episodes to binge
Man stumbles upon his phone background in real life
Russian censors couldn't stop Tor VPN, Snowflake. Now it's expanding as Snowstorm.