Listening Watch sounds out security idea with websites that listen | Cyber Security

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Mobile authenticator apps are a great way to improve password security. If only they didn’t slow you down by making you type in those darn numerical codes. Surely, in 2018, there must be a better way?

Two researchers at the University of Birmingham Alabama think they may have an answer, but it needs a pair of halfway-decent speakers, a phone, and a smartwatch.

Listening Watch, a project based on earlier work by researchers Prakash Shrestha and Nitesh Saxena, uses the power of sound to log you into your favourite websites. There’s a paper describing the concept here.

When logging into websites, two-factor authentication (2FA) offers an extra layer of protection over and above passwords because it checks an additional asset that the user owns before granting access. In some cases, this asset is a separate hardware token. In others, it’s a commonly-owned device like a smart phone. 

Attackers are always looking for ways to break 2FA. For example, RSA had to replace most of its SecurID tokens in 2011 after someone stole the codes used to initialise each one. NIST deprecated SMS as a 2FA mechanism in June last year after intruders were found stealing peoples’ phone numbers and using them for false authentication.

2FA is also finicky to use – it involves an extra step to log in to something – which is annoying for users. A 2016 study showed that 28% of users don’t use 2FA, and six in ten of those that do only do it because someone makes them.