Just wondering what people are using to meet the 2FA requirement GitHub has been rolling out. I don’t love the idea of having an authenticator app installed on my phone just to log into GitHub. And really don’t want to give them my phone number just to log in.
Last year, we announced our commitment to require all developers who contribute code on GitHub.com to enable two-factor authentication (2FA)…
It’s fine. The added security is huge
The problem is when they want you to install their TOTP app in order to authenticate (I’m looking at you, steam… fuck off)
I think I’d still prefer to use a 3rd-Party TOTP app but at least Steam’s app adds some value by pushing a notification when you login.
Steam is okay in my book because steam was the OG 2FA provider. They forced 2FA on everyone, all the way back in 2007, they took security seriously before anyone else really cared. So, they’re grandfathered in.
You can use Steam with a regular third-party TOTP authenticator, here’s a guide on how to set it up: https://help.ente.io/auth/migration-guides/steam/
I hate that. I think it’s lazy af.
You can use Steam with a regular third-party TOTP authenticator, here’s a guide on how to set it up: https://help.ente.io/auth/migration-guides/steam/
Exactly. At the end of the day there’s nothing being transmitted with OTP and using a standard app isn’t an issue.
If you’re rooted, Aegis can import the seed from the Steam app then you don’t need it anymore.
Oh, that’s awesome!
But I don’t have root
You may be able to use an older version of the app that allowed ADB backups, and extract the seed from that.
Another approach is to extract it from the Steam desktop app.
No idea what companies think they’re accomplishing by using non-standard TOTP apps (that actually do TOTP under the hood). Microsoft do it so they can track your location and report it to managers when you login because it’s something that management asks for. Some companies do it so they can lock you into their services. No idea why Steam does it.
There’s an easier way: https://help.ente.io/auth/migration-guides/steam/
Thanks, I didn’t know about
steamguard-cli
. And I was able to import the code into Aegis too (just had to set the type to “Steam” so it would generate 5-letter codes instead of normal TOTP)…
You don’t need root. https://help.ente.io/auth/migration-guides/steam/
Thank you!!
You don’t even need root. https://help.ente.io/auth/migration-guides/steam/
Or like eBay
How’s that? I’ve had TOTP in my github account for over a year, on Aegis, and I have not seen them asking me to do anything else.
GitHub is not an offender right now, but I can easily imagine Microsoft forcing some MS OTP app in the future
Agreed. It would surprise nobody.
I do agree but Steam’s app isn’t bad. It’s great if you use Steam’s social features and it makes secure login a total breeze.
It’s not that the app is good or bad. It’s that you are FORCED to use it when there is no technical reason for that requirement.
Let me reiterate: fuck valve
Sure, I don’t disagree, it shouldn’t be a requirement but because the app is good and makes the process easy, I don’t have a problem with it.
You can use it with a regular TOTP app, just like with Steam (but it requires some additional setup: https://help.ente.io/auth/migration-guides/steam/)
SMS is the least secure form of 2FA, and sim swaps are a very real thing. Whatever you’re issues with 2FA apps are, I can 100% say that you should be more concerned about actors getting access to your account.
And this isn’t just GitHub. You should be using a 2FA app for allllll of your services. Breaches are a daily thing, your passwords are online and are available. 2FA may be the only thing defending you right now, and SMS 2fa or email 2fa I wouldn’t trust.
Totally agree! 2FA on all the accounts that support it avoiding SMS. And different passwords (complex, auto generated by a password manager) for each single account. I may be paranoid, but I also use a different email alias (SimpleLogin) for every single account! 😆
same, a simple habit that is secure, I use it always with maximum privacy. One day you will be in a rush, under stress, affected by age, and use your old habits with a valuable asset…
SMS 2FA is still better than no 2FA.
Not if the org uses SMS auth as a recover method for your “lost” password
Also putting a phone number into a DB means the attackers who dump the DB now have a very effective way to phish or exploit you with a large attack surface.
I generally don’t let my team enter phone numbers into their account data.
But it should be the last resort. It makes sense why it’s being phased out
Unfortunately many banks still require it and have no other methods available. I tried to reason with my bank about it but they just do not care.
Well we could be using passkeys right now if Big Tech weren’t trying to tie them to their own platforms! 🤷
This, but my random, account-specific 20 char passwords are not online and available.
If you’re not already using 2fa everywhere you can, you’re already doing it wrong.
2FA is for people who don’t know how to use randomized passwords for every site
Brilliant. Until that website’s unsalted pw database is downloaded through a SQL injection.
Use both. You’re not smarter than security professionals.
- Salt doesn’t matter if your password is unique.
- If they can download data via SQL injection having them log in probably doesn’t matter that much.
- If they can dump your password/hash they can likely also dump the TOTP secret.
- A lot of website security expert attention is focused on raising the minimum security level. If you are using randomly generated passwords + auto-fill you are likely above their main target audience.
So yes, it is slightly better, but in practice that difference probably doesn’t matter. If you use U2F then you may have a meaningful security increase but IMHO U2F is not practical to use on every site due to basically being impossible to manage credentials.
So yes, it is better. But for me using random passwords and a password manager it isn’t worth the bother.
Called it
The day your machine is compromised is also the day ALL your passwords get stolen.
It doesn’t matter how random or secure your password is, it can still be compromised.
2FA increases security and costs nothing in return.
2FA is annoying and not necessary for most things.
Yeah I just want to type my name to be able to withdraw money from my bank account. No pesky pins or passwords or any form of authentication /s
Even in my bank’s ATM there’s only one password, not 2FA. 2FA is 2 factor auth, there’s no 2FA in the ATMs.
It doesn’t mean the initial password isn’t a layer of authentication, but strictly speaking where I live all ATMs do not employ 2FA.
The two factors at an ATM are possession of your bank card + knowledge of your pin. (it also takes your photo, for good measure)
GitHub will happily accept a smart card or whatever, if an extra plastic rectangle jives with you more than an OTP generator.
Card is your username duh. Some people are beyond saving.
The card number is your username, a physical card is a separate factor.
“Something you have” is absolutely not equivalent to “something you know”
You are completely unable to enter this conversation, but you think you’re the smartest one in the room.
I bet you’re insufferable.
You only need a password for the ATM, not a card and a password, which are two factors?
All security is annoying. Oh well.
You can try aegis if you’re on Android, open source, local, great
Also OTPclient on desktop, it can work directly with an Aegis encrypted export file. You enter the decrypt password when you open the app and it can auto-lock after a specified interval.
Is there something similar for windows? I check the github page & there doesn’t seem to be a package for windows. I could try to compile it from source but that a lot of libraries I have to get…
If you’re willing to work with unencrypted exports I think
tauthy
can import unencrypted Aegis JSON format.Also, what Aegis exports as “text format” is a standard format of sorts that consists in lines of
otpauth://
URLs. There are lots of apps that can import that format, but please note that you lose some extra information from Aegis when you export in that format. Shouldn’t be a problem if you just want to be able to generate codes on desktop.
Aegis looks great - I’ll give this a shot. Thanks for the recommendation!
Happy to help
I just use Bitwarden’s 2FA functionality.
This is premium functionality, for those who don’t know.
They have a free application too:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bitwarden.authenticator
Can it export the seeds?
This app is actually free (as in freedom) and not merely gratis.
And I heard that if you self host you can use the premium features for free
I believe thats only true for the unofficial version (Vaultwarden - API compatible to any Bitwarden app)
Worth the price for Bitwarden’s good practices imo, now if I could export all of my authy keys…
I know it’s possible, but Authy has made it a PITA… fuck authy.
What’s wrong with using a Foss TOTP app?
Yeah, this is important to realize. Most good 2FA implementations offer TOTP which doesn’t need a proprietary app. You can store all of your 2FA secrets in whatever app or password manager you like.
Aegis
Yubikey, but thats just a personal preference. A password manager works just as well.
The problem with Yubikey is that it doesn’t have a good enough management story for broad use. I do use it for a few core sites (like GitHub) but if I lose a key I need to get a replacement and register that replacement with every site I have set up U2F 2FA on. This is ok with a few core accounts but doesn’t scale to the hundreds of sites that I have an account with. I am sure to miss a few and then either I can’t log in with the new key or get completely locked out when I lose that key and get a second replacement.
I use keepassxc to generate the code.
Agreed, me to! And I use syncthing to sync my database between my devices Edit: mine is called KeePassDX but its the same database file
It’s fine. I moved to gitlab years ago for 2fa, so while this doesn’t affect me I would be entirely ok with normal 2fa.
It is normal, right? Not a weird Microsoft 2fa requiring their app?
Yes you can use any app, it’s standard TOTP.
Yes, normal TOTP
I already use
pass
(“the unix password manager”) and there’s a pretty decent extension that lets it handle 2fa: https://github.com/tadfisher/pass-otpWorth noting that this somewhat defeats the purpose of 2fa if you put your GitHub password in the same store as the one used for otp. Nevertheless, this let’s me sign on to 2fa services from the command line without purchasing a USB dongle or needing a smartphone on-hand.
Your two factors shift to possession of your password vault + knowledge of the password to it. You’re okay IMO.
You also still get the anti-replay benefits of the OTPs, though that might be a bit moot with TLS everywhere.
You’re right, I should have been more specific.
If you’re already storing your password using
pass
, you aren’t getting 3 factors withpass-otp
unless you store the otp generation into a separate store.For services like GitHub that mandate using an otp, it’s convenient without being an effective loss of 2fa to store everything together.
I don’t love the idea of having an authenticator app installed on my phone
For anything? Why not? Surely you don’t believe SMS-based TOTP is safer, right?
Wut. TOTP doesn’t involve sending an OTP. That’s the point.
“SMS-based TOTP” is a nonsensical phrase
“Time-based One-Time Password” literally says nothing about the delivery method. Who said it can’t involve remote sending?
And what would you call it, then, SOTP?
Anyway, regardless of the terminology-nitpicking, my point still stands.
The point of being time based is to not send it. That’s the whole point. To avoid that vecotor of attack.
Do you think the SMS codes are not time-based on the companies’ ends? How are they deriving the digits, then?
They are not time based, correct.
Interesting, I didn’t know that. So how do they derive the digits?
Best practice for a cryptographic nonce is to generate them randomly every time
Ideally you don’t want to build your open source software on a proprietary forge service so hopefully nothing of value is on the Microsoft-owned platform so it doesn’t really matter how secure it is.
But you should have a free software TOTP option on you anyhow. I use password-store’s OTP plugin so it is easier to back up & sync.
Did you forget the ./s or something? Lemmy itself is developed on GitHub, as are plenty of other “valuable” open source projects. To pretend nothing of value is built there is putting your head in the sand.
If you’re developing software on GitHub you have a chance at getting some useful feedback, bug reports and maybe even PRs. Like it or not, the network effect is real.
SFC recommends to not use them, so that’s what I will keep (not) doing.
Not /s
It is long past the time to move on. We don’t like the ads, gamified/corporate-friendly social media aspects, & enshitification of the web (which is why we are an Lemmy not Reddit), so why would we want that same platform for our code?
Also Lemmy has every interest in moving as soon as ForgeFed is finalized & merged into a forge the can host since they want the same decentralized values for their forge as their forum/link aggregator platform and have publicly acknowledged it is a problem.
Your projects should follow that example, if not your current projects at least future ones. These megacorporation are not our friends.
Its more secure and ssh keys are more convenient anyways
I just use my password manager to generate the TOTP. There’s no way I’m going to install an app just to use a website.