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If Plurilock analyzes keyboard interaction, does Plurilock know my password?

No. Plurilock does not use the actual contents of keyboard input for authentication, but rather the characteristic times and patterns between and during keystrokes.

This keytiming data is numeric, yet highly individualistic, and identifies users without relying on words, names, commands, or other content that are meaningful to humans. For this reason, Plurilock is generally privacy-safe and does not "know" your password.

2FA/MFA Rapid Reference

Authentication at a glance

Download the 2FA/MFA Rapid Reference now:

  • 2FA and MFA basics and common solutions
  • The benefits and drawbacks of each
  • Glossary of authentication terms

 

2FA/MFA Rapid Reference

  • 2FA and MFA basics and common solutions
  • The benefits and drawbacks of each
  • Glossary of authentication terms
Save PDF  

Downloadable References

PDF
Sample, shareable addition for employee handbook or company policy library to provide governance for employee AI use.
PDF
Generative AI is exploding, but workplace governance is lagging. Use this whitepaper to help implement guardrails.
PDF
Cheat sheet for basics to stay secure, their ideal deployment order, and steps to take in case of a breach.
PDF
Real-time, continuous authentication using behavioral biometrics and machine learning.
 
 
 
 
 

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