Excavating Vulnerabilities Lurking in Multi-Factor Authentication Protocols: A Systematic Security Analysis
Ang Kok Wee, Eyasu Getahun Chekole, Jianying Zhou

TL;DR
This paper systematically analyzes multi-factor authentication protocols to identify critical security vulnerabilities and performance issues, revealing flaws in ten protocols and proposing mitigation strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive set of security evaluation criteria and applies them to thoroughly analyze and identify vulnerabilities in existing MFA protocols.
Findings
Critical vulnerabilities found in ten MFA protocols
Discussion of mitigation strategies for identified vulnerabilities
Performance analysis showing costs with varying authentication factors
Abstract
Nowadays, cyberattacks are growing exponentially, causing havoc to Internet users. In particular, authentication attacks constitute the major attack vector where intruders impersonate legitimate users to maliciously access systems or resources. Traditional single-factor authentication (SFA) protocols are often bypassed by side-channel and other attack techniques, hence they are no longer sufficient to the current authentication requirements. To alleviate this problem, multi-factor authentication (MFA) protocols have been widely adopted recently, which helps to raise the security bar against imposters. Although MFA is generally considered more robust and secure than SFA, it may not always guarantee enhanced security and efficiency. This is because, critical security vulnerabilities and performance problems may still arise due to design or implementation flaws of the protocols. Such…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Authentication Protocols Security · Information and Cyber Security
