Works Perfectly - How-to Provided Below – LDS Authenticator Review

The app does exactly what it’s supposed to do, you set it up with your account and enable its ability to send you notifications on your phone/tablet. There have been questions about how the app works. I’ll provide a simple summary below: When you sign into your church account on the website (LDS.org or churchofjesuschrist.org), after you input your username and password, you’ll receive a notification from the Authenticator app asking if it’s really you signing in (a pop up on the screen of your mobile device). Simply tap that notification and affirm that you are the one signing into your account and voila! You’re in! The reason this is so important is that it protects you from people who steal your username and password getting into your account. If you were to see the notification asking if you were signing into your LDS account and you weren’t the one signing in right then in that moment, that means someone else is signing in with your username and your password. You select “no” or whatever the selection is to let the app know that you are not the one signing in and it won’t let whoever has your username and password into your account. If that ever happens, you need to change your password on your account because someone else knows it and is trying to access your account without your permission If for some reason the notification isn’t working (it’s not popping up on your screen to ask you for permission to sign into your LDS account), after you type in your username and password into the church website, then you have the option of simply opening the app and taking the number that shows up in the app and putting that into a field on the website that you’re signing into. Again, this just proves that it’s really you signing in because you have access to your username, your password, and you have access to the Authenticator app on your phone. What’s the likelihood that someone is able to steal your username, password, AND your phone and is able to get into the Authenticator app so they can sign in? Pretty small. Make sure you have a pin/fingerprint on your phone to keep it locked. If someone did pick up your phone and they can just swipe to get into all your apps, they can pretend to be you and sign into your account without you knowing it. Again, the app works perfectly. You can setup two-factor authentication on your google account, Twitter, Facebook, your bank, and many other personal accounts (and it’s strongly recommended that you do). Now you can secure your LDS account with two-factor authentication (aka 2FA, multifactor, MFA) as well.
Review by mcfleming on LDS Authenticator.

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