
Better Mouse, Better Mousetrap: Making the Shift to Phishing-Resistant MFA

Course Description:
Traditional multi-factor authentication (MFA) methods, like number matching and push verification, are increasingly vulnerable to sophisticated phishing attacks that can intercept and reuse not only credentials, but MFA tokens as well. This webinar, led by DelCor Technology Solutions security experts Andrew Leggett, Director of Cybersecurity, and Chris Ecker, CTO, will explore why standard MFA is no longer enough and how organizations can protect their assets with phishing-resistant MFA solutions. Attendees will learn about cryptographic authentication methods, such as Passkeys and Windows Hello for Business, that bind credentials to both the device and the user, making stolen credentials useless to attackers. The session will feature a live demo, giving participants a firsthand look at how phishing attacks are perpetrated and how phishing-resistant MFA works to thwart these attempts and create a seamless and secure login experience for staff.
Learning Objectives:
Explain the vulnerabilities of traditional MFA and how phishing attacks exploit these methods.
Describe the principles of phishing-resistant MFA, including cryptographic authentication and device binding.
Evaluate organizational solutions, such as Passkeys and Windows Hello for Business, to determine the most appropriate security approach.
Develop a practical implementation plan for phishing-resistant MFA to strengthen organizational security and enhance user experience.
Better Mouse, Better Mousetrap: Making the Shift to Phishing-Resistant MFA (NASBA/CAE/CPE Course Credit Information)
As a CAE Approved Provider educational program related to the CAE exam content outline, this program may be applied for CAE credits toward your CAE application or renewal of professional development requirements.
U.S Transactions Corp. is registered with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) as a sponsor of continuing professional education on the National Registry of CPE Sponsors. State boards of accountancy have final authority on the acceptance of individual courses for CPE credit. Complaints regarding registered sponsors may be submitted to the National Registry of CPE Sponsors through its website: www.NASBARegistry.org.
In accordance with the standards of the National Registry of CPE Sponsors, CPE credits have been granted based on a 50-minute hour.
(National Registry Sponsor Nr: 138278)







