• jadero
    link
    fedilink
    83 months ago

    I have seen some that seem to be doing that kind of thing, but many others that will reject a bad username before asking for a password.

    To double check, I just now tried putting a known bad email address into the username field for amazon.ca and was not then asked for a password, but told that no account could be found.

    My possibly flawed understanding of login security is that a failed login should reveal nothing about why the login failed in order to prevent information leakage that can be exploited.

    • Ephera
      link
      fedilink
      43 months ago

      Hmm, interesting.

      And yeah, that is my understanding, too. If an attacker knows that a certain e-mail address has an account associated, they might try to bruteforce the password or send a phishing mail to that e-mail address, which looks like an official mail from Amazon.

      I’m guessing, Amazon requires 2FA, which would protect from this to some degree, but still seems unnecessary to hand out information like that.

      • jadero
        link
        fedilink
        23 months ago

        Amazon allows 2FA, but I’m pretty sure they don’t require it.