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by eesmith 646 days ago
I've given up on using GitHub. Nothing else I use requires 2FA, I don't have a smart phone, and figuring out an alternative just to post bug reports is a waste of my time, so I've taken to emailing the developers instead.
2 comments

The complete lack of consistency in MFA requirements just show no one knows what the fuck they're doing.

DoorDash: Every time I need to enter an SMS code.

UberEats: Same thing, SMS code every time.

Grubhub: No MFA ever. Wonderful.

Twitch: Every couple days I need to enter a code sent to my email (because I won't give them my phone number which they really really want me to give them).

Reddit: no MFA requirement...for now. Given how fucking garbage they've become I wouldn't be surprised if they start enforcing it soon.

Amazon: no MFA requirement despite sometimes asking.

GMail: no MFA requirement despite also asking.

> I don't have a smart phone

GitHub’s 2FA gives you the option to use SMS. But even for the authenticator method you don’t need a phone, most decent password managers nowadays support saving (and auto-filling) 2FA tokens.

There’s also the option to print/write down the one-time codes. Though the latter would admittedly be a bother if you log out frequently.

Point being there’re many ways to go about it.

Sure, but I don't like any of those options. I don't want Microsoft to have my phone number, I have like 15-20 logins, which is small enough to keep on paper [1], so I have no password manager, and I always logged out of GitHub since I generally log in to things via a private window.

I really, really don't like being tracked, "filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered", so avoid accounts as much as possible, and all the more so from megacorporations.

[1] Correction: I originally said 10-15 but I remembered a few that are in the Firefox password manager, like archive.org.