Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Microsoft: Using multi-factor authentication blocks 99.9% of account hacks

Microsoft cloud services are seeing 300 million fraudulent sign-in attempts every day. MFA can help protect accounts against many types of account takeover attacks.

Microsoft support number says that users who enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) for their accounts will end up blocking 99.9% of automated attacks.
The recommendation stands not only for Microsoft accounts but also for any other profile, on any other website or online service.

 Microsoft-support-number

If the service provider supports multi-factor authentication, Microsoft customer service phone number recommends using it, regardless if it's something as simple as SMS-based one-time passwords, or advanced biometrics solutions.

"Based on our studies, your account is more than 99.9% less likely to be compromised if you use MFA," said Alex Microsoft outlook support number, Group Program Manager for Identity Security and Protection at Microsoft outlook support number.

PASSWORDS DON'T MATTER ANYMORE


Microsoft helpline number said that old advice like "never use a password that has ever been seen in a breach" or "use really long passwords" doesn't really help.

He should know. Weinert was one of the Microsoft outlook support phone number engineers who worked to ban passwords that became part of public breach lists from Microsoft's Account and Azure AD systems back in 2016. As a result of his work, Microsoft users who were using or tried to use a password that was leaked in a previous data breach were told to change their credentials.

 Microsoft-outlook-support-phone-number

But Microsoft support phone number said that despite blocking leaked credentials or simplistic passwords, hackers continued to compromise Microsoft accounts in the following years.

He attributed this to the fact that passwords or their complexity don't really matter anymore. Nowadays, hackers have different methods at their disposal to get their hands on users' credentials, and in most cases, the password doesn't matter.

GOOGLE SAID THE SAME THING 


Microsoft's boast that using MFA blocks 99.9% of automated account takeover (ATO) attacks isn't the first of its kind.

Google said that users who added a recovery phone number to their accounts (and indirectly enabled SMS-based MFA) were also improving their account security.

 Microsoft-customer-service-phone-number

"Our research shows that simply adding a recovery phone number to your Google Account can block up to 100% of automated bots, 99% of bulk phishing attacks, and 66% of targeted attacks that occurred during our investigation," Google said at the time.


When both Google and Microsoft customer service number is recommending the same thing, it's probably a good time to start following their advice.

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