top | item 43426366

(no title)

doomroot | 11 months ago

The title is clickbait, in the article it says they can verify online. The change is to stop verification over the phone.

discuss

order

acdha|11 months ago

You might want to read past the first paragraph before incorrectly claiming it’s clickbait. The fourth paragraph covers why online verification excludes a lot of people - nearly half of older Americans - and the fifth covers the building closures which remove the option many people use to fill that gap.

One thing in particular to consider is how painful MFA is for many people, especially those with marginal connectivity or disabilities, and how commonly older people are phished or have malware on their generally older, often unpatched devices. If you haven’t supported a population like this, it’s way more of a barrier than you might think.

billev2k|11 months ago

MFA is often painful for me, and I've been a dev since we were called "programmers".

amazing_stories|11 months ago

It's a terrible policy. I know someone who is 74 and never owned a computer. They own a smartphone but only know how to use the phone app and really don't understand texting. I was shocked when I learned this and I imagine there are many people like him.

ohnoitsahuman|11 months ago

A good portion of people in such situations will have children or loved ones who will walk them through online portion.

cosmic_cheese|11 months ago

A lot of older individuals still don’t use the internet in any capacity, not even through a smartphone. For those people, effectively the only option is to visit an office.