Is Phone-based Two Factor Authentication Secure? Gmail two factor authentication requires you to enter an SMS sent to your handphone before you can use Gmail on a new computer. This means that hackers needs to have your hand-phone and password before they can access your Gmail. Sounds secure? Guess what, Grant Blakeman’s Gmail account was hacked in 2012 even though he had two factor authentication turned on. Read How Hackers Reportedly Side-Stepped Google’s Two-Factor Authentication in Gizmodo. Hackers must have discovered his password, and his phone calls were forwarded to a different number by hackers who had persuaded Grant’s cellphone provider… By JurisTech| 2020-03-27T17:26:17+00:00 2nd November, 2015|Insights| About the Author: JurisTech The Marketing & Communications team at JurisTech comprises skilled digital marketing strategists and content creators who deliver invaluable insights drawn from our experts in lending and recovery software solutions. For media queries, please contact us at mac@juristech.net.au. Related Posts Scaling Digital Customer Onboarding: Gain an Edge with Cloud-Native Applications 13th March, 2025 Everything You Need to Know About Scalable Banking: AI, Cloud-Native Tech, and Digital Transformation 11th March, 2025 6 Game-Changing Use Cases of Generative AI in Lending and Recovery 20th February, 2025