I’m sure they don’t keep the spoons in there. That would be silly. Now can you grab me a double A battery real quick from the junk drawer? The kitchen timer for the soufflé just died out.
@@talksickgamerSSO is different. It's like getting boarding passes for onward flights. Each pass is trusted without having to go to the counter again.
This will become muscle memory to somebody way down the line, they’ll go to someone else’s house and open the fridge and oven before grabbing a fork, and then closing it all, out of habit.
If you break your phone to the point where you can't turn it on, and you try to log in on a new one, MFA becomes a freaking nightmare. This has happened to me twice.
Some MFA provides you with backup codes that you can use as one time login, like Google's Authenticator. You can generate a few at a time, write it down somewhere safe. Always handy whenever you don't have phone access.
Only turn 2FA if you want to lose your account. Imagine the only thing preventing you from losing your account is a phone that is prone to breaking anytime.
I recently wiped my hard drive thinking nothing of it, turns out I had MFA Backup Codes on it. A week later my phone broke and wouldn't turn on. Goodbye Discord Account ☠️
@sailor5853 Any reasonable authenticator gives you backkup codes. Whether you just screenshot them or actually write them down is your lot. And in case it's something like Steam then there's a multitude of ways to prove you're the owner of said account anyhow.
I once paint $1700 a month for an apartment in Austin, TX where this exact thing happened with one of the drawers in the "luxury kitchen". They fixed it by crudely cutting off the side of the drawer with a saw. The next year, they bumped the rent up to $1800, and then $2400 a year or two after I was gone. :)
Go to reset the password and be asked if you'd prefer a text message on your phone or an e-mail to a specified recovery e-mail address. Choose the text, enter the code, then be told that now they are going to e-mail your recovery address for "extra security" and wonder why the hell they asked you the first question.
I just recently had my kitchen redone and they didn't leave me enough room to open my fridge door all the way. now when I want to clean it I have to pull it out into the center of the room so I can open it all the way.
So if the stuff in the cabinet is your account and the drawer idk your password, your oven and fridge are 2 separate devices and you gotta hack into all 3 to get the goods.
This is single-factor, multi-step authentication - you’re doing two of the same thing to get in. To be multi-factor, it needs to combine different types of authentication. E.g something you know (like a password), something you have (like a key, ID pass or RSA token), or something you are (like a fingerprint).
As someone who works at a large corporation who uses this to the extreme. Yes. It is EXACTLY like this. When you must use multiple devices to log back into multiple things sometimes multiple times a day.
@@capofantasma97 what? password manager to change my password that I need to use two-step verification to actually change, I need the code it sends me. How am I supposed to get that without a phone that needs my phone number. You don't think I haven't tried And if you're going to say anything about a computer, I don't have one
@@ToughestHentaiMaster MFA software provide backup codes and an alternative recovery method. Every service also provides single use recovery codes as an alternative means to access whenyou lost your MFA data. If you did your due diligence, all of that is safely stored and backed up by your password manager...
@@MaddoxMelton I just looked at my bank it has no master code only an option for a different phone number, Google has 1 time temporary codes and Amazon has nothing from what I found. So I don't know where you're getting those master codes from but I don't got'em or there buried in some convoluted nonsense