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Do you know how 2FA is disabled without your consent on Lemmy.world?

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[-] MrKaplan@lemmy.world 24 points 3 months ago

Hi,

this was unfortunately an error on our end.

Please bear with us while we work on resolving this situation.

[-] MrKaplan@lemmy.world 6 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

2FA has been restored for all LW users that had it enabled before and didn't reactivate it on their own since.

There will be an announcement posted later on explaining what happened.

edit: announcement is out: https://lemmy.world/post/18503967

[-] vk6flab@lemmy.radio 12 points 3 months ago

Ask your instance administrator.

[-] B0rax@feddit.org 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

You should ask that in the community of your instance, not asklemmy. Asklemmy is not the support community.

[-] walden@sub.wetshaving.social 3 points 3 months ago

Lemmy is beta software. One of the updates around the 0.19.0 mark (we're up to 0.19.5 now, with 0.19.6 around the corner) changed the login stuff. I don't remember the details, but instead of locking everyone out of their accounts, 2FA was disabled. The lemmy.world admins didn't choose this, it's just how the update worked.

I don't know what kind of communication or sticky posts were used during the upgrade, but I'm sure some people missed it, including OP.

[-] MrKaplan@lemmy.world 8 points 3 months ago
[-] walden@sub.wetshaving.social -2 points 3 months ago

Right. Not a bug, but a decision by the developers in order to upgrade the 2FA stuff.

[-] MrKaplan@lemmy.world 11 points 3 months ago

this is a separate issue unrelated to the 0.19 update.

[-] lightscription@lemmy.world 0 points 3 months ago

Ah, that must be it. 2FA is still a very good security feature to have.

But there is nothing only you know that is still useful because a secret must be shared in order to be useful (unless you just have full disk encryption and then when it is unlocked and network connected, it is still vulnerable). In short, admins could change your password since you are not the sole admin of your own server but then you would have to have mass appeal to be "useful", i.e. popular.

In theory, Tim Cook might have a keybearer who could usurp the throne with all the proprietary OEM crypto keys that only the Company knows, but everyone knows who the CEO is and the keybearer could get in big trouble unless he had an army...

Things can be changed on the server side and the network is not the same as the device: these are technology truths some people refuse to ever understand.

this post was submitted on 09 Aug 2024
7 points (63.0% liked)

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