Obviously none of the above posters (save for Josh) have ever used RSA SecurID to log in.
"which provide both secure date storage and RSA SecurID software tokens for two-factor authentication (eliminating the need for a separate hardware authenticator). "
You can encrypt any drive for free, sure, but you can't put SecurID on it and act as your authenticator.
If you don't work in an enterprise environment, you probably wouldn't understand.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
nmason @ Apr 7th 2008 2:22PM
Obviously none of the above posters (save for Josh) have ever used RSA SecurID to log in.
"which provide both secure date storage and RSA SecurID software tokens for two-factor authentication (eliminating the need for a separate hardware authenticator). "
You can encrypt any drive for free, sure, but you can't put SecurID on it and act as your authenticator.
If you don't work in an enterprise environment, you probably wouldn't understand.
gfar @ Apr 7th 2008 3:08PM
SecurID Software eh? If this was a USB key and had rolling digits on it like their RSA tokens, I'd be happier.
nmason @ Apr 7th 2008 6:32PM
It does have rolling digits, they're just software based.
Hardware RSA SecurID cards are soooooo 2005.