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Implementing Multifactor Authentication

You're reading from   Implementing Multifactor Authentication Protect your applications from cyberattacks with the help of MFA

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803246963
Length 550 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Marco Fanti Marco Fanti
Author Profile Icon Marco Fanti
Marco Fanti
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction
2. Chapter 1: On the Internet, Nobody Knows You’re a Dog FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: When to Use Different Types of MFA 4. Part 2: Implementing Multifactor Authentication
5. Chapter 3: Preventing 99.9% of Attacks – MFA with Azure AD and Duo 6. Chapter 4: Implementing Workforce and Customer Authentication Using Okta 7. Chapter 5: Access Management with ForgeRock and Behavioral Biometrics 8. Chapter 6: Federated SSO with PingFederate and 1Kosmos 9. Chapter 7: MFA and the Cloud – Using MFA with Amazon Web Services 10. Chapter 8: Google Cloud Platform and MFA 11. Chapter 9: MFA without Commercial Products – Doing it All Yourself with Keycloak 12. Part 3: Proven Implementation Strategies and Deploying Cutting-Edge Technologies
13. Chapter 10: Implementing MFA in the Real World 14. Chapter 11: The Future of (Multifactor) Authentication 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A: Installing the Java Software Development Kit 1. Appendix B: Custom App Integration with Azure AD 2. Appendix C: Installing Apache Tomcat Software

AWS IAM

Before cloud services like AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud were available, cyber security was very different. Companies needed to build their own data centers or rent space with hosting companies to deploy their own servers somewhere else. Virtual security for those enterprise data centers was based on one fundamental idea: keep the bad actors out.

As seen in Figure 7.1, the main security perimeter for an enterprise was created using a firewall between the cloud (everything external to the enterprise) and the enterprise servers. Within the enterprise data center, an internal firewall would also separate the trusted part of the network from the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), where the public-facing servers, such as web and mail servers, would reside:

Figure 7.1 – Security before the cloud

Figure 7.1 – Security before the cloud

In a typical scenario, a user would try to access a web application from Acme and connect to its web server. The user would then log in to the web server and...

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