As companies increasingly adopt MFA, cybercriminals are developing a variety of strategies to steal credentials and gain access to high-value accounts anyway.
By Robert Lemos
As companies increasingly require stronger versions of security for their employees and customers, attackers are getting better at bypassing multifactor authentication (MFA), resulting in a steady stream of compromises, such as this week's announcement of a data leak at cybersecurity firm LastPass and the announced breach at social media service Reddit earlier in February.