For our business we use a number of different apps and websites but only two of them offer 2FA with a security key. The rest allow for an authenticator app. In this case, it seems just using an authenticator app would be best for consistency and without needing to purchase keys.

Of course, installing authenticatior apps on each device would be a no-no since it wouldn’t technically be 2FA. Then do we use each employee’s personal phones? Not sure how to proceed.

  • @[email protected]
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    810 months ago

    The ideal solution is to have one identity provider and then use Single Sign-On (SSO) to authenticate your users to all of their other apps. All of the big identity providers (Microsoft, Google, Okta, etc) support security keys.

    I recognize that it might not be feasible to use SSO for all of your apps as a small business; a lot of SaaS platforms unfortunately charge extra for SSO. That being said my advice would be use SSO whenever possible for your apps and include SSO availability in your decision-making process for purchasing new software.

    For those apps that do not support SSO, my advice would be to either compensate employees for using their personal devices for work or give them corporate devices that are only used for work things.

    • @[email protected]
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      510 months ago

      I would just give them a Yubikey or something similar and then they don’t need to use a phone to store the TOTP codes (the app for that purely accesses the data on the key, there are desktop applications for that too) and for webauthn you want to connect it directly to the work device anyway.

    • @[email protected]
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      210 months ago

      The big advantage is that you only need to authenticate once and don’t need another 2FA app for every service you need to access. It gets quite annoying to type a TOTP code five times a day.