Январь 2010 Февраль 2010 Март 2010 Апрель 2010 Май 2010
Июнь 2010
Июль 2010 Август 2010
Сентябрь 2010
Октябрь 2010
Ноябрь 2010
Декабрь 2010
Январь 2011
Февраль 2011 Март 2011 Апрель 2011 Май 2011 Июнь 2011 Июль 2011 Август 2011
Сентябрь 2011
Октябрь 2011 Ноябрь 2011 Декабрь 2011 Январь 2012 Февраль 2012 Март 2012 Апрель 2012 Май 2012 Июнь 2012 Июль 2012 Август 2012 Сентябрь 2012 Октябрь 2012 Ноябрь 2012 Декабрь 2012 Январь 2013 Февраль 2013 Март 2013 Апрель 2013 Май 2013 Июнь 2013 Июль 2013 Август 2013 Сентябрь 2013 Октябрь 2013 Ноябрь 2013 Декабрь 2013 Январь 2014 Февраль 2014
Март 2014
Апрель 2014 Май 2014 Июнь 2014 Июль 2014 Август 2014 Сентябрь 2014 Октябрь 2014 Ноябрь 2014 Декабрь 2014 Январь 2015 Февраль 2015 Март 2015 Апрель 2015 Май 2015 Июнь 2015 Июль 2015 Август 2015 Сентябрь 2015 Октябрь 2015 Ноябрь 2015 Декабрь 2015 Январь 2016 Февраль 2016 Март 2016 Апрель 2016 Май 2016 Июнь 2016 Июль 2016 Август 2016 Сентябрь 2016 Октябрь 2016 Ноябрь 2016 Декабрь 2016 Январь 2017 Февраль 2017 Март 2017 Апрель 2017 Май 2017
Июнь 2017
Июль 2017
Август 2017 Сентябрь 2017 Октябрь 2017 Ноябрь 2017 Декабрь 2017 Январь 2018 Февраль 2018 Март 2018 Апрель 2018 Май 2018 Июнь 2018 Июль 2018 Август 2018 Сентябрь 2018 Октябрь 2018 Ноябрь 2018 Декабрь 2018 Январь 2019
Февраль 2019
Март 2019 Апрель 2019 Май 2019 Июнь 2019 Июль 2019 Август 2019 Сентябрь 2019 Октябрь 2019 Ноябрь 2019 Декабрь 2019 Январь 2020
Февраль 2020
Март 2020 Апрель 2020 Май 2020 Июнь 2020 Июль 2020 Август 2020 Сентябрь 2020 Октябрь 2020 Ноябрь 2020 Декабрь 2020 Январь 2021 Февраль 2021 Март 2021 Апрель 2021 Май 2021 Июнь 2021 Июль 2021 Август 2021 Сентябрь 2021 Октябрь 2021 Ноябрь 2021 Декабрь 2021 Январь 2022 Февраль 2022 Март 2022 Апрель 2022 Май 2022 Июнь 2022 Июль 2022 Август 2022 Сентябрь 2022 Октябрь 2022 Ноябрь 2022 Декабрь 2022 Январь 2023 Февраль 2023 Март 2023 Апрель 2023 Май 2023 Июнь 2023 Июль 2023 Август 2023 Сентябрь 2023 Октябрь 2023 Ноябрь 2023 Декабрь 2023 Январь 2024 Февраль 2024 Март 2024 Апрель 2024 Май 2024 Июнь 2024 Июль 2024 Август 2024 Сентябрь 2024 Октябрь 2024
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27
28
29
30
31
Game News |

Can no-one help? There has to be something better than forever suffering under the tyranny of two-factor authentication for just bloody EVERYTHING

Dave James - Editor-in-chief, PCG Hardware

(Image credit: Future)

This month I have been mostly... willing myself to play Rogue Trader. I mean, I like Warhammer 40K, and I love CRPGs. So, what's stopping me? The early launch day bugs and the cautioning words of my brother, into whom it has its claws already. But it's better now, and I really ought to dive in before I get lost in Dragon Age: The Veilguard.

It's better to be safe than sorry. That's the received wisdom around internet security. And fair enough; a ton of our life is online, as well as some of our most prized possessions. Y'know, like our Steam and bank accounts. But, for the love of Gabe, there has to be something better than the ever-more-bloated tyranny of two-factor authentication to keep them and us safe.

Before I rant, however, I do want to make it crystal that I get it. I know why we have 2FA. I understand that in an age where there are growing numbers of cybersecurity incidents, whether perpetrated on individuals or companies, it is vital to find a way to ensure logins are safe, robust, and secure.

It's certainly better than the days of having an almighty Steam press account stolen from under our noses back in the bad old days of the internet hinterlands, and it's better than the weirdly flimsy passcode generators I once needed for online banking, which would invariably collapse in on themselves in some pocket-based singularity, locking me out until I could get a new one from a physical branch. But really 2FA just makes me want to cry. Every. Single. Day.

My daily routine just to log in and get working in the morning is so grating it feels like a hawthorn twisting under my fingernails with each, ever-more frustrated thock on my keyboard. For that, Google is the worst offender, a prime candidate for the first 2FA against the wall when the revolution comes.

For reasons so boring I needn't go into them here, I have to log into my PC Gamer Google account fresh every eight hours, or so. Thankfully, the exciting shiny new dialog at least retains my email address, but as a managed account Chrome refuses to hold onto my password.

This means I have to enter it fresh every time. That alone is an aching pain akin to a lightly grazed gonad. It lingers and it grows. But it's not the end of it.

Then I have to verify my own login attempt via phone. That is usually just a case of opening my phone—via some form of biometric or pattern-based authentication—and then hitting a button on the screen. Sometimes it's not though. Sometimes I have to ask my PC to text a passcode to my phone via SMS, because for whatever reason Google can't see my phone well enough to punt a standard verification notice through it. That then needs to be entered manually into the Google dialog on desktop Chrome.

However it comes through, that should be the end of it. That should be me into my Google life and ready to sift through emails about new tech, weird tech, stock updates, cybersecurity training (hoho), and for some reason emails about celebrity reality shows.

But no. That's not it. Because as soon as I log into my email account it will bring up my inbox for the briefest of moments, before hoofing me back out to the login screen again, because it says I am no longer logged in.

So, I have to do it all again. Every day. On any device. Google logs me out immediately and demands I jump through all its hoops just one more time.

While Brin and Page laugh maniacally in one of their myriad mansions.

Then I must log into the instant messaging app we use to communicate across the team, which again requires that well choreographed digital dance of email address, password, 2FA hit on my phone and my own tenuous sanity.

Sometimes I'll just sit in a boiling cauldron of rage, seething quietly to myself, battling to bring down my blood pressure for fully ten minutes before saying one word to anyone. Sometimes I just channel that rage and see how many people on the team I can upset in one brief tirade.

Neither, I believe, is a particularly healthy way to start the day.

(Image credit: Future)

Were it just my working life I could probably cope with it. I mean, work's not meant to be fun, is it? Nevermind that I have to use the Google Authenticator app if I want to post to our social platforms, don't worry that if I end up working a little later I have to login again (????‍♂️twice????‍♂️) when it kicks me out for being too damned diligent.

But I can't escape when I'm gaming, either. Steam, I'll give you, is pretty robust. Sure, I need to use a form of 2FA to get into my ultra valuable account for the first time, but once I'm in I can be pretty confident I'm not going to have to do that again on that particular machine unless something catastrophic happens. I cannot say the same for either EA, Ubisoft, or Epic.

Remember me. Please remember me. And if you cannot remember me, at least remember the hardware you live inside. Alas no, however many times I ✅ that box these amnesiac game stores will invariably pop up the very next time with a friendly "Gee, it's nice to meet you, would you like to play a game?"

And so the dance begins anew. Go find that password in my password manager. Sometimes maybe even find out what the hell I called that damned account or what email I tied it to. Then log in. Then dig out whatever passcode I need, etc. etc.

It's relentless and in this modern age there is no respite. But, as I said, I get it. We do need some form of security when we're spending $80 - $100 on an ephemeral game code licence, and when we live our lives so firmly online. And two-factor authentication was a smart way to better protect companies and individuals from brute force attacks on stored details. Yes, even if your password security is breached you're still safe behind the armour of 2FA.

Because of its success, it has become ubiquitous, to the point where each and every login for any of your online portals, profiles, or applications will demand some secondary form of proof of your personal veracity.

It's just that it's… a lot. There has to be a better way, is all I really want to say.

Now, I'm absolutely not smart enough to know what that other way might be, and I absolutely do not want to say AI because I know somebody will throw that hat into the ring. To me, AI login control feels less secure than just having a single universal password tattooed on your forehead.

Maybe we could all just be, y'know, nicer to each other? Then people wouldn't need to steal things online, and we could all just share. It's nice to be nice. There, I've solved internet security in the modern age. You're welcome.



Читайте также

Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 is effectively banned in Kuwait, so Activision is issuing refunds for pre-orders: 'We remain hopeful that local authorities will reconsider'

Starship Troopers: Extermination — поспешная высадка в релиз. Рецензия

You're not going to see 'Peter Griffin or anime characters coming to Hunt,' says Crytek in response to fears that its Scream crossover means it's Fortnite now




Game24.pro — паблик игровых новостей в календарном формате на основе технологичной новостной информационно-поисковой системы с элементами искусственного интеллекта, гео-отбора и возможностью мгновенной публикации авторского контента в режиме Free Public. Game24.pro — ваши Game News сегодня и сейчас в Вашем городе.

Опубликовать свою новость, реплику, комментарий, анонс и т.д. можно мгновенно — здесь.


Персональные новости

Завершился второй этап проекта «Русский язык: читаем, слушаем, смотрим в странах СНГ»

В России во второй раз пройдет Международный телевизионный конкурс детской авторской песни «Наше поколение»

Заместитель управляющего Отделением Фонда пенсионного и социального страхования Российской Федерации по г. Москве и Московской области Алексей Путин: «Клиентоцентричность - наш приоритет»

В театре «Русская песня» пройдет фестиваль «Большая сцена»