Which authentication flow is the most secure?

Username, Password, Biometrics22%

Username, Biometrics, Password40%

Biometrics, Password, Username19%

All are equally secure.16%

Other (comment below)

lock icon

Please join or sign in to view more content.

280 PARTICIPANTS
4.1k views1 Upvote3 Comments
Sort By:
Oldest
Director of Information Security in Energy and Utilities3 years ago
kind of interestingly worded question as they are all really a form of authentication and it shouldn't really matter how you place them if you are using all 3 of them in an authentication sequence.
3 1 Reply
Director of Technology Strategy in Services (non-Government)3 years ago

My thoughts too.

C-Suite in Construction3 years ago
I would say 2FA is the most fairly secure way to go. Add to it biometrics for very critical level accesses.

For physical access to high secure areas it would be biometrics combined with access code and card reader. (Who you are + what you know + what you have).
4

Content you might like

VP of IT in Retail3 days ago
My previous organization implemented a strict one-strike policy for lost or damaged devices. While the first incident was considered an accident, repeat offenders were required to reimburse the company for the lost or damaged ...read more
82 views1 Comment

TCO19%

Pricing26%

Integrations21%

Alignment with Cloud Provider7%

Security10%

Alignment with Existing IT Skills4%

Product / Feature Set7%

Vendor Relationship / Reputation

Other (comment)

View Results
5.7k views3 Upvotes1 Comment

Yes79%

No20%

1.2k views
Vice President, Software Engineering6 days ago
There are plenty of sophisticated platforms that provide ECM capabilities like OpenText (xECM, Content Server, Documentum), Hyland (Nuxeo, Alfresco, OnBase), Microsoft SharePoint (best suited for collaboration), IBM Filenet. 
All ...read more
1k views1 Upvote1 Comment