Draft NIST 800-207 is out—and it calls for continuous authentication.  
 
NIST's newest draft document covers Zero Trust Architectures—and sounds some familiar notes.
 
Plurilock has always argued that true “zero trust” requires continuous authentication. Now, Publication 800-207 seems to echo this opinion.  
 
    Read the article →   
 
 
Painless Phishing Prevention
Illicit credential use is a huge cybersecurity threat, and phishing is a key cause. But you can secure yourself against phishers without alienating your users.
Read the article →
 
 
Plurilock—Now with FAQs
Like any innovator, Plurilock fields constant questions about our technology. Our new FAQ area is filled with answers to those we recieve most often.
Find the answer to a question →
Continuous authentication, not passwords and legacy MFA. Password rules and SMS OTP codes are no longer passable security.
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See what all the jargon means. Plurilock’s glossary of security terms pairs well with our new FAQ area.
Find the meaning of a term →
     
 
Plurilock delivered on their promise to reduce authentication friction, and we were surprised at how efficient and simple to administer the system is. The authentication really is biometric-strong—and we’ve seen very few false alarms.”
 
— CIO, EdTech Vendor
 

Aspiring to be a zero trust organization?
 
You’re going to need continuous authentication.
We can help.

 Plurilock DEFEND →

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