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One tap and you're signed in: NFC two-variable verification comes to versatile

If you're security minded enough to not guard your email account with the old "12345" password, then you're probably already familiar with two-factor authentication. Want to log-in online? You'll need your password as well as a second 'key' (whether digital or physical) to verify your identity.

While the practice is well established on desktop, mobile security has been slow to catch up to quick and easy two-factor authentication, until now.

Yubico has introduced the first physical USB key that allows you to login to your online accounts on your mobile phone via NFC. The Yubikey Neo taps against your phone to verify your login credentials without need for an app like Google Authenticator.

Consider it like a house key. Your email address and secret word are similar to your road address, however so as to get into the house you require a physical key to open the entryway. The same goes here: you sign into your Gmail account, for instance, and when it comes time to check yourself, you hold the key against the back of your NFC-empowered telephone to true. In case you're on desktop, simply slide it into your USB port, give it a tap and you're in like Flynn. 

The thought of a physical key is not new, and Yubico itself has been playing in the space for quite a while with a straight USB key for desktops, including login support for Dropbox and Github in 2015. In any case, the move to versatile is an appreciated advancement - especially when you consider how compact and individual our telephones are. 

There are no individual subtle elements put away on they key, yet it's not coordinated to an individual unique finger impression or client, which means anybody with the key (and, vitally, your login points of interest) could utilize the Yubikey. 


Still, the comfort of having a physical dandy that you bear on you and can rapidly use to login has a ton of potential. Since two element confirmation gauges got an overhaul a year ago to include support for remote availability, we might see much more adornments - like Bluetooth consoles or your most loved remote mouse - get this sort of ability later on.
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